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2016

TEN YEARS OF
MEASURING PEACE

Quantifying Peace and its Benefits


The Institute for Economics and Peace (IEP) is an independent, non-partisan, non-profit
think tank dedicated to shifting the worlds focus to peace as a positive, achievable, and
tangible measure of human well-being and progress.
IEP achieves its goals by developing new conceptual frameworks to define peacefulness;
providing metrics for measuring peace; and uncovering the relationships between
business, peace and prosperity as well as promoting a better understanding of the
cultural, economic and political factors that create peace.
IEP has offices in Sydney, New York, Brussels and Mexico City. It works with a wide range
of partners internationally and collaborates with intergovernmental organizations on
measuring and communicating the economic value of peace.
For more information visit www.economicsandpeace.org

CONTENTS

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 

RESULTS & FINDINGS 

Highlights 6
2016 Global Peace Index rankings

Regional overview

10

Risers & fallers

16

GPI domain & indicator: Annual changes

20

TRENDS IN PEACE

23

Highlights 25

Trends in peace since 2008

26

Indicator trends

29

Long-term trends

33

GLOBAL ECONOMIC VALUE OF PEACE 

41

Highlights 43
Methodology 44
Economic impact of violence: results

POSITIVE PEACE & SYSTEMS THINKING

51

Introduction

54

Systems thinking: the nation state & peace

58

Resilience and positive peace

62

Building positive peace recommendations for catalysing systemic change

70

SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOAL 16


5

46

73

Measuring Goal 16

76

Goal 16: peace, justice and strong institutions

77

APPENDICES 
Appendix A: GPI methodology
Appendix B: GPI indicator sources, definitions and scoring criteria

94
95
99

Appendix C: Violence containment costs by country

108

Appendix D: 2016 GPI domain scores

110

END NOTES

113

REFERENCES

115

VIOLENCE

COSTS

13.3

deteriorated slightly, reflecting increases in the impact of


terrorism due to the large terrorist attacks in Paris and
Brussels as well as the escalation of violence and instability in
Turkey and its deteriorating relations with its neighbours.
The largest regional improvement occurred in Central
America and the Caribbean, recording an average
improvement of one per cent. The South and North
America regions made progress as well, while MENA
experienced the largest deterioration, followed by subSaharan Africa, Europe and the Asia-Pacific.
The historic ten-year deterioration in peace has largely
been driven by the intensifying conflicts in the MENA
region. Terrorism is also at an all-time high, battle deaths
from conflict are at a 25 year high, and the number of
refugees and displaced people are at a level not seen in sixty
years. Notably, the sources for these three dynamics are
intertwined and driven by a small number of countries,
demonstrating the global repercussions of breakdowns in
peacefulness. Many countries are at record high levels of
peacefulness, while the bottom 20 countries have
progressively become much less peaceful, creating
increased levels of inequality in global peace.
Over the past decade, the average country score
deteriorated by 2.44 per cent with 77 countries improving
while 85 countries deteriorated, highlighting the global
complexities of peace and its uneven distribution.
The number of refugees and displaced persons increased
dramatically over the decade, doubling from 2007 to 2015, to
approximately 60 million people. There are nine countries
with more than 10 per cent of their population classified as
refugees or displaced persons with Somalia and South Sudan
having more than 20 per cent of their population displaced
and Syria with over 60 per cent displaced.
The stand-out improvement over the period is UN
peacekeeping funding which improved by 12 per cent. The
other indicator with the most improvement is external
conflicts fought, however this has been offset by an increase
in internal conflicts fought. The two other indicators to
show improvement are armed service personnel and
military expenditure, both improving by five per cent. The
number of armed service personnel declined in 48 of the 51
countries classified as authoritarian, highlighting the shift
to more technologically advanced militaries.

The economic impact of violence on the global economy in


2015 was $13.6 trillion in purchasing power parity (PPP)
terms. This figure represents 13.3 per cent of the worlds
economic activity (gross world product) or $1,876 for every
person in the world. To put this in perspective, it is
approximately 11 times the size of global foreign direct
investment.
The economic analysis highlights how the economic losses
from conflict dwarf the expenditures and investments in
peacebuilding and peacekeeping. Peacebuilding and
peacekeeping expenditures represent only two per cent of
the global economic losses from conflict.
Further research on Positive Peace is presented in this
report, which conceptualises systems thinking and its
relationship to Positive Peace. Many of the challenges facing
humanity are fundamentally global in nature, such as
climate change, decreasing biodiversity, continued economic
instability and increasing migration. All of these challenges
are interconnected and multifaceted, requiring new ways of
conceptualising the relations between countries and the
larger systems upon which humanity depends. This report
contains an analysis of systems thinking and how it applies
to nation states, describing concepts of national intent, their
encoded norms, national homeostasis, self-modification and
mutual feedback loops to provide a new inter-dependent
framework and more holistic approach to understanding
peace and development.
The report also provides an analysis of countries resilience
to shocks and how levels of Positive Peace affect the
likelihood and impact of shocks and hazards. Countries with
high Positive Peace are more likely to maintain their
stability and adapt and recover from both internal and
external shocks. Low Positive Peace systems are more likely
to generate internal shocks, with 84 per cent of major
political shocks occurring in these countries. Similarly, there
are 13 times more lives lost from natural disasters in nations
with low Positive Peace as opposed to those with high
Positive Peace, a disproportionally high number when
compared to the distribution of incidents.
The final section of the report provides an audit of the
available data to measure Goal 16 of the Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs). For the first time, UN member
states have formally recognised the critical nature of
peacefulness in advancing global development. The 17 SDGs
are a new set of goals to target poverty, inequality, injustice
and climate change by 2030. Goal 16 relates to the
promotion of peace, justice and strong institutions.
IEPs audit of the existing data for Goal 16 finds that whilst its
targets are only partly measurable, there is sufficient existing
data to adequately track progress. However, while indicative
progress can be gauged, there are still significant challenges
to data availability, disaggregation, reliability, timeliness and
objectivity. It will take significant time and investment for
countries to develop the necessary capacities to measure Goal
16. Independent assessment will be critical in plugging data
gaps and verifying the accuracy of national statistical data.

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016

GLOSSARY
The following terms used throughout the 2016 Global Peace Index Report are defined
here for reference:

Correlation

Indirect cost of violence

The statistical relationship between two variables; how much one

Accounts for costs that accrue after the violent event and include indirect

variable changes in relation to another variable. IEP uses linear

economic losses, physical and physiological trauma to the victim and lost

correlations to compare the strength of the association between

productivity.

different variables.

Internal peace
Correlation coefficient

A set of indicators that measures how peaceful a country is inside its

A value between -1 and 1 that shows the strength of the correlation

national borders.

between two variables, where -1 indicates a perfect indirect correlation,


0 indicates no correlation and 1 indicates a perfect direct correlation.

Direct cost of violence


Costs which are directly attributed to a specific form of violence. Direct

Multiplier
A scaling factor used to adjust the value of one variable based on another
variable. For example, the economic impact of violence is calculated using
a multiplier of two.

costs include the cost of violence to the victim, the perpetrator and the
government. These include direct expenditures, such as the cost of

Negative Peace

policing.

The absence of violence or the fear of violence.

Economic impact of violence

Positive Peace

The expenditure and economic effect related to containing, preventing

The attitudes, institutions and structures that create and sustain peaceful

and dealing with the consequences of violence. The estimates include

societies. These same factors also lead to many other positive outcomes

the direct and indirect cost of violence as well as an economic

that support the optimum environment for human potential to flourish.

multiplier.

Encoded norms

Resilience
The ability of a country to absorb and recover from shocks, for example

The values by which society self-organises.

natural disasters or fluctuations in commodity prices.

External peace

Self-modification

A set of indicators that measures how peaceful a country is outside its

A process by which society modifies itself to accommodate new situations

national borders.

and challenges.

Global Peace Index (GPI) domains

Shock

Ongoing domestic and international conflict

A sudden change from inside or outside a nation-state system that has

Indicators of the number and intensity of ongoing civil and


international wars.

Societal safety and security


Indicators of the levels of safety and security within a country, such
as the perception of criminality in society, the level of political
instability and the rate of homicides and violent crimes.

Militarisation

the potential to cause harm.

Significant
Of high importance or noteworthiness.

Significant, statistically
A result that is unlikely to be due to chance alone, as measured
statistically using probability. A standard definition is a p-score of less

Indicators of a nations military capacity, both in terms of the

than .05. This means that there is only a 5% chance that the results of an

economic resources committed to the military and support for

analysis are due to chance.

multilateral operations.

Violence containment

Homeostasis

Economic activity related to the consequences or prevention of violence

A persistent state of self-regulating and balanced stability.

where the violence is directed against people or property.

RESULTS
& FINDINGS

HIGHLIGHTS

zz

zz

zz

zz

The world became slightly less peaceful in 2016, with

zz

The international communitys requirement for and

the average GPI country score deteriorating by 0.53

committment to UN peacekeeping funding reached

per cent.

record highs in early 2016.

Over the past year, 81 countries improved their

zz

The security officers and police rate decreased in

peacefulness, while 79 countries deteriorated. The

44 countries and increased in 29, with the biggest

average deterioration was larger than the average

reductions occurring in Kazakhstan, Moldova and

improvement, accounting for the global drop in score.

France.

The societal safety and security and ongoing

zz

Violent crime improved in 13 countries and deteriorated

conflict domains both deteriorated, while

in only five. The largest absolute change occurred in

militarisation recorded a slight improvement.

Libya.

The largest improvement was recorded in the UN

zz

The impact of terrorism deteriorated in 77 countries,

peacekeeping funding and security officers and police

while improving in 48. Only 37 of the 163 countries

indicators, while the largest deterioration occurred in

measured had no impact of terrorism. The largest

terrorism impact and political instability.

deterioration in this indicator was in the Middle East


and North Africa.

The 2016 Global Peace Index overall score deteriorated slightly


compared with 2015, and at a faster rate than the previous year.
Once again, the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) was the
region that saw its levels of peace deteriorate the most. Four
regions scored worse than the previous year, while three other
regions improved and two remained the same.
The score for MENA already the least peaceful region in the
world dropped further as numerous regional conflicts
persisted or escalated and new ones emerged. Notably, the civil
war in Syria broadened its international scope as a result of the
Russian intervention that began in September 2015 on the side of
the Syrian government. Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia intervened in
Yemens ongoing civil war and the US-led coalition continued
airstrikes against the so-called Islamic State in Iraq and the
Levant (ISIL). The campaigns in both Syria and Iraq have
intensified since the Paris terrorist attacks in November. In
contrast, Europe maintained its position as the most peaceful
region in the world, notwithstanding some deterioration in its
score. Although the region remains largely devoid of internal
conflict, the looming threat of terrorism continues to weigh on
the regions prospects for further advances in peace.
With regard to societal safety and security, there were mixed
successes across the different regions. Only a small number of
countries experienced a change in either perceptions of
criminality or the level of violent crime and in both cases more
countries improved than deteriorated. The scores for the
number of jailed population per 100,000 people also roughly
cancelled each other out between the countries that had higher

incarceration rates last year and those that had lower. Notably,
only MENA and South America saw a rise in the level of violent
crime, which improved or remained static in all other regions.
South America and Central America and the Caribbean were
frequently the worst performers in the indicators relating to
societal safety and security, with the only exceptions being an
excessive incarceration rate in the United States and MENAs
large numbers of internal security forces. The latter, however,
improved in all regions in 2016 except South Asia and MENA.
Less favourable were the results for political instability, which
worsened in 39 countries from 2015 to 2016. A striking case this
year was Brazil, where the trigger was a major corruption
scandal. This instability, however, has not yet translated into a
higher likelihood of violent demonstrations except in South Asia,
MENA, and sub-Saharan Africa, which were already at the
bottom of the rankings. At the same time, political terror
increased globally, with Europe recording the second biggest
deterioration worldwide, after Asia-Pacific. Despite this, Europe
is still the best placed region in the Political Terror Scale
rankings. The number of refugees and internally displaced
people also deteriorated across much of the world, with only a
modest improvement in South America failing to make up for
deteriorations in every other region. The most significant
deteriorations in this indicator were seen in Central America and
the Caribbean - mainly in the Golden Triangle countries of
Honduras and Guatemala, as well as MENA, where the outbreak
of war in Yemen has led to a humanitarian crisis.

81

Countries
became

MORE
PEACEFUL

79

LESS
PEACEFUL
(SINCE 2015)

The results for indicators related to ongoing domestic and


international conflict also varied widely. The number of deaths
from internal organised conflict lessened in three regions,
including modestly in MENA, but increased in four other
regions, particularly in Russia and Eurasia where the Ukraine
conflict continued. Although the global score for the number of
deaths from external organised conflict also deteriorated, the
average was heavily skewed due to the results from MENA, and
to a lesser extent South Asia; all other regions improved or
stayed the same. The number and duration of internal conflicts
improved in more countries than deteriorated, however, the
global average score did deteriorate due to the intensification
and persistence of war in Syria, Ukraine, the Central African
Republic and Libya. A greater number of countries deteriorated
for the number, duration and role in external conflicts, and
almost all regions did worse than in 2015. The biggest slump
came in North America, where the US remains mired in
numerous Middle Eastern conflicts as well as in Afghanistan.
The possibility of a political settlement in Syria and Yemen
would certainly boost the outlook for domestic and
international conflict in the coming year, but the persistence of
ISIL as a threat to the region suggests that outside powers will
remain engaged in the Middle East for some time. In line with
heightened external tensions, the average score for relations
with neighbouring countries deteriorated globally and in three
of nine regions. Perhaps most worrying from an international
security perspective is that impact of terrorism was the indicator
that deteriorated the most, even though three regions, Russia
and Eurasia, Central American and the Caribbean, and South

Asia, recorded improvements. Aside from MENA, Europe was


the region that suffered most from terrorism compared with last
year, with Turkey, France and Belgium among the most affected.
Belgium and France have struggled with home-grown Islamic
terrorism, which was highlighted by the terrorist attacks in Paris
in November 2015.
Finally, the indicators relating to militarisation recorded a
slight improvement on average. Although military expenditure
as a percentage of GDP continued to climb in over 70 countries
along with the volume of imports of major conventional
weapons, the number of armed services personnel per 100,000
people was down overall, with only a noticeable uptick in Russia
and Eurasia and Central America and the Caribbean, which in
the latter case mostly relates to domestic security concerns
rather than the risk of external conflict. Nuclear and heavy
weapons capabilities also eased. The region that remains at
highest risk of further militarisation is MENA, where numerous
countries are continuing to build up their conventional arsenals
and import an increasing number of weapons. The escalation of
existing conflicts in the Middle East, as well as the opening of
new fronts such as Yemen, will continue to encourage military
build-ups in neighbouring countries, particularly those that are
directly involved in these conflicts.

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Results & Findings

RANK COUNTRY

SCORE

Iceland

1.192

11

Finland

1.429

21

Netherlands

1.541

31

Romania

1.649

1.246
1.278

12

1.433
1.445

23

Poland
Mauritius

1.557
1.559

32

13

Ireland
Bhutan

22

Denmark
Austria

33

Latvia
Costa Rica

1.680
1.699

New Zealand

1.287

14

Sweden

1.461

24

Slovakia

1.603

34

Qatar

1.716

1.356
1.360

15

1.465
1.486

26

Spain
Croatia

1.604
1.633

35

16

Australia
Germany

25

Portugal
Czech Republic

36

Uruguay
Estonia

1.726
1.732

Switzerland

1.370

17

Norway

1.500

27

Chile

1.635

37

Lithuania

1.735

1.388
1.395

18

1.528
1.534

29

Botswana
Bulgaria

1.639
1.646

38

19

Belgium
Hungary

28

Canada
Japan

39

Madagascar
Italy

1.763
1.774

10

Slovenia

1.408

20

Singapore

1.535

30

Malaysia

1.648

40

Zambia

1.783

2.148
2.148

111
111

Honduras
El Salvador

2.237
2.237

113

Niger

2.239

2.161
2.176

114

THE STATE OF PEACE

Very high
High
Medium
Low
Very low
Not included

2016 GLOBAL
PEACE INDEX
A SNAPSHOT OF THE GLOBAL STATE OF PEACE

RANK COUNTRY

79

Gabon
Paraguay

2.033
2.037

90
91

Swaziland
Morocco

2.074
2.086

101

80
81

Bolivia

2.038

92

The Gambia

2.091

82

2.044
2.045

92
94

Jamaica
Macedonia (FYR)

2.091
2.092

103

83

Greece
Bangladesh

84

Trinidad and Tobago 2.056

95

Guyana

2.105

85

Georgia
Cuba

2.057
2.057

96

85

97

Jordan
Sri Lanka

2.127
2.133

85

Peru

2.057

98

Angola

2.140

88

Burkina Faso
Haiti

2.063
2.066

99

Papua New Guinea 2.143


Dominican Republic 2.143

89

10

SCORE

99

101

Uganda
Guinea

105

United States of
America
Cambodia
Brazil

106

Belarus

2.202

116

Republic of the
Congo
Myanmar
Guinea-Bissau

106

Turkmenistan
Algeria

2.202
2.213

117

Guatemala

2.270

108

118

109

Uzbekistan

2.216

119

Cote d Ivoire
Ethiopia

2.279
2.284

110

Armenia

2.218

120

China

2.288

104

2.154

115

2.249
2.256
2.264

41

Taiwan

1.787

51

Kuwait

1.842

42

1.799
1.805

52

43

Indonesia
Sierra Leone

53

Laos
South Korea

1.852
1.858

44

Ghana

1.809

54

Albania

1.867

45

1.817
1.829

55

46

Malawi
France

56

Namibia
Timor-Leste

1.873
1.879

47

United Kingdom

1.830

57

Montenegro

1.884

48

1.834
1.837

58

49

Serbia
Panama

Tanzania
Vietnam

1.899
1.906

50

Mongolia

1.838

121

Djibouti

2.292

132

Bahrain

122

Tajikistan

2.293

133

Iran

123

2.295
2.297

134

124

Mauritania
Kyrgyz Republic

125

Thailand

126

69

Nicaragua

1.975

70
71

Senegal
Cyprus

1.978
1.994

72

Benin

1.998

72
74

Liberia
Oman

1.998
2.016

75

Kazakhstan

2.019

76
77

Ecuador
Kosovo

2.020
2.022

78

Nepal

2.026

62

Bosnia and
1.915
Herzegovina
United Arab Emirates1.931
Equatorial Guinea
1.940

63

Lesotho

1.941

64
65

Tunisia
Moldova

1.949
1.953

66

Togo

1.954

67
68

Argentina
Mozambique

1.957
1.963

2.398

143

Venezuela

2.651

154

Libya

3.200

2.411

144

Israel

2.656

155

Sudan

3.269

2.450
2.460

145

2.710
2.752

2.312

136

Chad

2.464

147

Colombia

2.764

2.316
2.322

137
138

Mali
Burundi

2.489
2.500

148

127

South Africa
Zimbabwe

149

Palestine
Nigeria

2.832
2.877

159

Ukraine
Central African
Republic
Yemen
Somalia

3.287

146

Turkey
Lebanon

156

135

Azerbaijan
Eritrea

128

Rwanda

2.323

139

Philippines

2.511

150

North Korea

2.944

160

Afghanistan

3.538

129

2.338
2.356

140
141

Mexico
India

2.557
2.566

151

130

Saudi Arabia
Cameroon

162

Iraq
South Sudan

3.570
3.593

131

Kenya

2.379

142

Egypt

2.574

Russia
3.079
Democratic Republic
3.112
of the Congo
Pakistan
3.145

161
163

Syria

3.806

59

60
61

152
153

157
158

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Results & Findings

3.354
3.399
3.414

11

REGIONAL
OVERVIEW

Year-on-year changes in peacefulness at the regional level are highlighted


in figure 1.1. The biggest improvement in peacefulness occurred in the
Central America and Caribbean region, with an average improvement of
two per cent. The other two regions in the Americas also recorded
improvements in peacefulness, while all other regions either deteriorated
or remained approximately the same.
The most significant deterioration by far occurred in MENA. The
average GPI country score deteriorated by over six per cent, with
the largest deteriorations occurring in Yemen (15.1 per cent),
Bahrain (7.2 per cent) and Libya (6.5 per cent).

EUROPE
Europe is once again the most peaceful geographical region in the
world according to the GPI. It now accounts for six of the top seven
places in the global rankings. The highest-ranking countries in the
world remain unchanged from 2015: Iceland, Denmark and
Austria. The largest improvement in the region was recorded by
Portugal, which built on gains last year to rise nine places to fifth
globally. This reflects continuing improvements in the context of
the countrys gradual return to political normality following its EU/

IMF economic and financial adjustment process. Notwithstanding


the difficulties faced by the left-of-centre government elected in
2015, Portugal has recorded a second year of improvements across
numerous dimensions, notably the likelihood of violent
demonstrations, but also the Political Terror Scale and political
instability. Among the other Eurozone countries to have exited
similar bailout arrangements, there were only minor movements:
Ireland roughly maintained its score while Spain and Cyprus saw
slight deteriorations. Cyprus maintained its rank of 71st in the
index. The one country that has yet to exit its bailout arrangement,
Greece, slipped back in this years index, amid continuing
difficulties with implementing the terms of the bailout,
compounded by the emergence of new risks of social unrest
associated with Europes migration crisis. Having jumped 22 places
in 2015, Greece dropped four places globally to 82nd this year.

FIGURE 1.1 GPI OVERALL SCORE CHANGE BY REGION, 2015 2016


The Middle East and North Africa continued to deteriorate in 2016, while Central
America and the Caribbean recorded the largest improvement.
Central America and the Caribbean
South America
North America
South Asia
Russia and Eurasia
Asia-Pacific
Sub-Saharan Africa
Europe
Middle East and North Africa
-0.03 -0.02 -0.01 0.00 0.01 0.02 0.03 0.04 0.05 0.06 0.07

CHANGE IN GPI SCORE, 2015 TO 2016


More peaceful
Source: IEP

12

Less peaceful

Regionally, Greece lies in 34th place out of


the 36 European countries, ahead of only
the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia
(94th globally) and Turkey (145th).
Macedonia dropped 15 places between 2015
and 2016the biggest slide down the global
rankings for a European country, followed
by Kosovo. However, Turkey saw the largest
deterioration in score for the region.
Notwithstanding the November 2015
terrorist attacks in Paris, improvements
related to violent demonstrations and levels
of policing more than offset deteriorations
in terrorism-related indicators for France.
The country fell by one place in the ranking
(to 46th). Belgium, another European
country to be affected by high-profile
terrorist attacks in recent months, dropped
down the global rankings by three places (to

18th), driven by a deterioration on the impact of terrorism score


and a sharp worsening of the level of perceived criminality in
society. The scores of two of the largest European countries, France
and the UK, are held down by very low rankings on external peace
indicators, in line with their repeated military engagements in
recent years.

TABLE 1.1 EUROPE RANKINGS


COUNTRY

OVERALL
RANK

OVERALL
SCORE

CHANGE IN
SCORE

REGIONAL
RANK

Iceland

1.192

-0.006

Denmark

1.246

0.023

Austria

1.278

-0.005

Portugal

1.356

-0.064

Czech Republic

1.360

-0.058

Switzerland

1.370

-0.006

Slovenia

10

1.408

-0.018

Finland

11

1.429

0.020

Ireland

12

1.433

0.004

Sweden

14

1.461

0.011

10

Germany

16

1.486

-0.019

11

Norway

17

1.500

-0.018

12

NORTH AMERICA
The North America region score remains almost as it was in 2015,
as a very minor deterioration in the score for Canada was offset by
a similar improvement in the US. North America remains the
second most peaceful region in the 2016 GPI. The past year was a
mildly encouraging one for the US. The country was instrumental
in driving a multilateral deal to restrict Irans use of nuclear
material to peaceful purposes and in the lifting of sanctions that
followed. Further diplomatic progress was made with Cuba,
another country historically considered an enemy by the US
government. However, US involvement in the armed conflict
against ISIL escalated, with thousands of airstrikes conducted in
Islamic State-held territory. This situation is reflected in a
deterioration in the score for number, duration and role in external
conflicts. Relations between the US and Russia have also
deteriorated further, with Russias support for the Syrian
government led by President Bashar al-Assad putting the former
Cold War enemies on opposite sides of that conflict. Closing the US
detention facility in Guantanamo Bay in Cuba remains an objective
of the president, Barack Obama, before he leaves office. Although
Canadas score deteriorated in this edition, driven by ongoing
conflict and militarisation scores, the year actually saw
developments that ought to enable a future improvement in its
score. The election in October 2015 of a Liberal Party government
will result in the acceptance of thousands of Syrian refugees,
greater spending on humanitarian aid, and the withdrawal of
combat troops from missions in Iraq and Syria. These decisions
will all be beneficial for the countrys score.

Belgium

18

1.528

0.035

13

Hungary

19

1.534

-0.011

14

Netherlands

21

1.541

0.013

15

Poland

22

1.557

0.032

16

Slovakia

24

1.603

0.033

17

Spain

25

1.604

0.027

18

Croatia

26

1.633

0.002

19

Bulgaria

29

1.646

-0.023

20

Romania

31

1.649

0.010

21

Latvia

32

1.680

-0.017

22

Estonia

36

1.732

-0.018

23

Lithuania

37

1.735

0.006

24

Canada
United States of
America

Italy

39

1.774

0.004

25

France

46

1.829

0.014

26

United Kingdom

47

1.830

-0.016

27

Serbia

48

1.834

-0.013

28

Albania

54

1.867

-0.016

29

Montenegro

57

1.884

-0.007

30

Bosnia and
Herzegovina

60

1.915

-0.004

31

Cyprus

71

1.994

0.016

32

Kosovo

77

2.022

0.035

33

Greece

82

2.044

0.019

34

Macedonia (FYR)

94

2.092

0.042

35

Turkey

145

2.710

0.090

36

REGIONAL AVERAGE

1.660

TABLE 1.2 NORTH AMERICA RANKINGS


COUNTRY

OVERALL
RANK

REGIONAL AVERAGE

OVERALL
SCORE

CHANGE
IN SCORE

REGIONAL
RANK

1.388

0.014

103

2.154

-0.012

1.771

The largest improvement


in the region was recorded
by Portugal.

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Results & Findings

13

ASIA-PACIFIC

CENTRAL AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN

The Asia-Pacific region ranked third after Europe and North


America in the GPI. The level of peace in the region has remained
largely unchanged since 2015. However, a number of countries
have improved their score this year including Indonesia, TimorLeste, Myanmar and Thailand. Heightened tensions in the South
China Sea will continue to impact external relations between the
three main nations concerned, China, Vietnam and the
Philippines. Nevertheless, although the likelihood of further
military skirmishes in the disputed waters is high, a large-scale
military engagement remains unlikely. Political instability has
hampered peace in Cambodia. The rapprochement appears to have
ended between the ruling Cambodian Peoples Party and the
opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party, which may influence
internal conflict indicators in the coming year. The likelihood of
mass anti-government protests is remote but the number of people
unjustifiably detained will no doubt continue to increase.
Thailands modest improvement in its score has been driven largely
by its efforts to improve relations with neighbouring countries,
particularly Cambodia, an age-old rival. Domestic peace in
Thailand however, is somewhat forced as the military rule junta
has strongly cracked down on any form of dissidence and many
anti-junta protesters and supporters of the previous populist
government have been arrested over the past year. Following the
successful completion of peaceful elections, Myanmar made
significant progress in reducing political instability. Furthermore,
the signing of a multiparty ceasefire in October 2015 means that
the risk of conflict is now more contained in smaller parts of the
countrys border areas. As a result, the country has risen 12 places
in the global rankings. New Zealand, Japan and Australia have
remained the most peaceful countries in the region.

Despite the regions myriad security-related issues, the average


score in Central America and the Caribbean improved
sufficiently for it to overtake South America in the regional
rankings and to position itself slightly above the global average
in 2016, scoring fourth place overall. The regions top three
performers are again Costa Rica, Panama and Nicaragua.
Panama had the greatest improvement in the score within the
region and jumped 24 places in the global rankings due to a
lower likelihood of violent demonstrations and political
instability in 2015, which followed elections in 2014. All three
top performers are characterised by low levels of militarisation.
Costa Rica in particular has no standing armed forces, although
border disputes have occasionally arisen. The only two countries
which rose in the regional rankings were Trinidad and Tobago
and El Salvador, owing to a reduction in the number of jailed
population per 100,000 people, and an improvement in the
Political Terror Scale, respectively. Despite this, both countries
still face significant challenges for peace, particularly El
Salvador, which has suffered from an escalation in urban
violence ever since a truce between rival mara gangs broke
down in 2014. Honduras also faces similar gang-related issues.
Cuba, Haiti, Jamaica and Guatemala all fell in the regional
rankings even though all of themexcept for Guatemalasaw
improvements in their score, particularly in the indicators
relating to internal peace. Finally, Mexico remains at the bottom
of the regional ranking as a result of a mild score deterioration
driven by a rising military and security presence and the
increased number of displaced people resulting from the
ongoing drugs war. In broad terms, Central America and the
Caribbean will continue to benefit from the absence of intraregional conflicts, and minimal nuclear and heavy weapons
capabilities among them, although domestic security issues
mainly in the form of crimewill remain the regions biggest
obstacle to peace.

TABLE 1.3 ASIA-PACIFIC RANKINGS


COUNTRY

OVERALL
RANK

OVERALL
SCORE

CHANGE
IN SCORE

REGIONAL
RANK

New Zealand

1.287

-0.019

Japan

1.395

0.031

Australia

15

1.465

0.025

Singapore

20

1.535

-0.007

Malaysia

30

1.648

0.025

Taiwan

41

1.787

0.020

Indonesia

42

1.799

-0.006

Mongolia

50

1.838

0.042

Laos

52

1.852

0.029

South Korea

53

1.858

0.026

10

Timor-Leste

56

1.879

-0.013

11

Vietnam

59

1.906

0.007

12

Papua New Guinea

99

2.143

0.031

Cambodia

104

2.161

Myanmar

115

2.256

COUNTRY

OVERALL
RANK

OVERALL
SCORE

CHANGE IN
SCORE

REGIONAL
RANK

Costa Rica

33

1.699

0.000

Panama

49

1.837

-0.069

Nicaragua

69

1.975

-0.013

Trinidad and
Tobago

84

2.056

-0.026

Cuba

85

2.057

-0.006

Haiti

89

2.066

-0.011

Jamaica

92

2.091

-0.009

Dominican
Republic

99

2.143

0.005

13

-0.005

14

Honduras

111

2.237

0.004

-0.035

15

El Salvador

111

2.237

-0.024

117

2.270

0.021

11

140

2.557

0.003

12

China

120

2.288

-0.001

16

Guatemala

Thailand

125

2.312

-0.049

17

Mexico

REGIONAL AVERAGE

Philippines

139

2.511

-0.010

18

North Korea

150

2.944

-0.011

19

REGIONAL AVERAGE

14

TABLE 1.4 CENTRAL AMERICA & THE CARIBBEAN


RANKINGS

1.940

2.102

SOUTH AMERICA

SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA

Despite a slight improvement in the overall score since last year,


South America as a region dropped one notch in the global
rankingsnow fifth out of nine regional groupings, overtaken
by Central America and the Caribbean, albeit by a very narrow
margin. In the past year, South America has continued to
benefit from low levels of international conflict and
militarisation, given the lack of any significant external conflicts
affecting the region and relatively low spending on developing
heavy weapons or financing large armies. Relations among
neighbouring countries are mostly peaceful, despite the odd and
periodical tension between Venezuela and neighbouring
Colombia and Guyana. This year, Venezuelas score for relations
with neighbouring countries deteriorated as tension escalated.
This situation reflects domestic political attempts to boost
nationalism amid deep economic and political difficulties for
the government of President Maduro, which is fighting for
survival. There are also historical border tensions, channelled
via the International Court of Justice, between Chile and Peru
and Chile and Bolivia, regarding gaining sea access for the
latter. In terms of internal peace, the region overall performs
below the global average in spite of slight improvements in most
countries. Argentina and Venezuela and, to a lesser extent,
Guyana and Peru are the exceptions. There has been an increase
in persecution of political dissidents in Argentina, under the
government of Cristina Fernndez de Kirchner, as well as in
Venezuela. On 10 September 2015, Leopoldo Lpez, a
Venezuelan opposition leader, was sentenced to 13 years and
nine months in prison for public incitement to violence. For
both countries this situation is reflected by a weaker
performance on the Political Terror Scale. Greater political
instability in Venezuela has also contributed to this years score
deterioration. Overall, the regional rankings continue to be led
by Chile and Uruguay, which rank 27th and 35th, respectively,
out of 163 analysed countries. Venezuela, in 143th position, and
Colombia, in 147th, close the regional classification.

Sub-Saharan Africas average score deteriorated slightly,


although it continues to rank ahead of Russia and Eurasia,
South Asia, and MENA. The deterioration of the average score
masks sharp variations in country performance. For example,
stronger relations with neighbouring countriesdriven by
efforts to bolster regional security co-operationhelped
improve the score of countries such as Chad, Mauritania and
Niger. Unfortunately though, the threat posed by Islamist
terrorist groups has continued to weigh on the score of many
countries in the Sahel and West African region. In other
countries, the holding of elections has driven improvements in
overall scores. Most notably, Nigeria experienced its first
democratic transition following the presidential election,
reflected in an improvement in its score on political instability.
Guinea and the Central African Republic (CAR) also saw their
scores improve as political stability strengthened following the
holding of elections, although the CAR remains among the
worst-performing countries in the region. South Africa was a
top-five improver globallythough it still ranks a lowly 126th
worldwidedriven by an improvement in the Political Terror
Scale, as well as a reduction in arms trade and military
spending. After falling 42 places in the 2015 GPI, Djiboutis
rank has fallen a further 19 places in the 2016 index as social
unrest and resentment against the governments authoritarian
rule have continued to intensify in the run-up to the April 2016
presidential election. Burundi also performed poorly as the
country slid towards civil war following the incumbent
presidents controversial efforts to cling onto power by seeking a
third term in office, which his opponents claimed was
unconstitutional. Burkina Faso saw its score deteriorate too, as
insecurity and crime levels deteriorated as a result of the
turbulent political transition following the ousting of the
countrys long-time president in late 2014. Cte dIvoire was one
of the best performers in the 2015 GPI but fell back in the latest
index as the fragile security situation in the sub-region was
undermined by the March 2016 terrorist attack in GrandBassam on an Ivorian seaside resort.

TABLE 1.5 SOUTH AMERICA RANKINGS


COUNTRY

OVERALL
RANK

OVERALL
SCORE

CHANGE IN
SCORE

REGIONAL
RANK

Chile

27

1.635

-0.005

Uruguay

35

1.726

-0.031

Argentina

67

1.957

0.006

Ecuador

76

2.020

-0.011

Paraguay

80

2.037

-0.020

Bolivia

81

2.038

-0.015

Peru

85

2.057

-0.014

Guyana

95

2.105

0.003

Brazil

105

2.176

0.007

Venezuela

143

2.651

0.034

10

Colombia

147

2.764

-0.012

11

REGIONAL AVERAGE

2.106

South America has continued


to benefit from low levels of
international conflict and
militarisation.

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Results & Findings

15

RUSSIA AND EURASIA


TABLE 1.6 SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA RANKINGS
COUNTRY

OVERALL
RANK

OVERALL
SCORE

CHANGE IN
SCORE

REGIONAL
RANK

Mauritius

23

1.559

0.023

Botswana

28

1.639

-0.018

Madagascar

38

1.763

-0.015

Zambia

40

1.783

-0.020

Sierra Leone

43

1.805

-0.012

Ghana

44

1.809

0.001

Malawi

45

1.817

0.056

Namibia

55

1.873

-0.002

Tanzania

58

1.899

0.001

Equatorial Guinea

62

1.940

-0.015

10

Lesotho

63

1.941

0.014

11

Togo

66

1.954

-0.004

12

Mozambique

68

1.963

0.002

13

Senegal

70

1.978

0.039

14

Benin

72

1.998

0.010

15

Liberia

72

1.998

0.023

15

Gabon

79

2.033

0.027

17

Burkina Faso

88

2.063

0.076

18

Swaziland

90

2.074

-0.017

19

The Gambia

92

2.091

-0.020

20

Angola

98

2.140

0.028

21

Uganda

101

2.148

-0.040

22

Guinea

101

2.148

-0.030

22

Niger

113

2.239

-0.032

24

Republic of the
Congo

114

2.249

0.001

25

Guinea-Bissau

116

2.264

-0.003

26

Cote dIvoire

118

2.279

0.040

27

Ethiopia

119

2.284

0.002

28

Djibouti

121

2.292

0.054

29

Mauritania

123

2.295

-0.044

30

South Africa

126

2.316

-0.047

31

Zimbabwe

127

2.322

0.009

32

Rwanda

128

2.323

-0.009

33

Cameroon

130

2.356

0.011

34

Kenya

131

2.379

0.007

35

Eritrea

135

2.460

0.022

36

Chad

136

2.464

-0.025

37

Mali

137

2.489

0.011

38

Burundi

138

2.500

0.065

39

Nigeria

149

2.877

-0.022

40

Democratic
Republic of the
Congo

152

Central African
Republic

157

3.354

-0.024

42

Somalia

159

3.414

0.032

43

South Sudan

162

3.593

0.001

44

REGIONAL AVERAGE

16

3.112

2.234

-0.001

41

Russia and Eurasias position in the global ranking remains


unchanged in the 2016 GPI, with the third worst regional score.
The biggest improvements in score within the region were
registered by Belarus, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan. The largest
deteriorations in score were registered by Tajikistan and
Ukraine. In Tajikistan this reflects the rise in the risk of internal
conflict, driven by the increasingly authoritarian rule of the
president, Emomali Rahmon, and a serious economic
downturn. In September 2015, a major conflict within the elite
led the government to accuse the deputy minister of defence,
Abdulhalim Nazarzoda, of treason. A firefight between
government troops and his supporters led to the death of at
least 45 people. For some countries, the aggregate scores
masked divergent trends on different metrics. In the case of
Ukraine, for example, a second ceasefire agreement signed in
February 2015 led to a significant reduction in fighting in the
conflict in the east of the country. Nevertheless, its score was
dragged down by a sharp rise in militarisation. In the case of
Russia, while hostilities were dampened down in the Donbas
region of Ukraine, in September their air force launched a
major bombing campaign in Syria. The five-and-a-half-month
campaignostensibly aimed at combating Islamic State, but
largely serving to shore up the regime of President Bashar
al-Assadwas the countrys first military engagement outside
the post-Soviet space since the dissolution of the Soviet Union.
The campaign led to a serious diplomatic standoff with Turkey
in November, after the latter downed a Russian attack aircraft it
claimed had violated Turkish airspace. In March 2016 President
Vladimir Putin declared that Russia would withdraw the main
part of its forces, as its principal military objectives had been
met. However, with peace negotiations unlikely to yield a lasting
settlement, lower-level Russian military involvement may
continue.

TABLE 1.7 RUSSIA & EURASIA RANKINGS


COUNTRY

OVERALL
RANK

OVERALL
SCORE

CHANGE
IN SCORE

REGIONAL
RANK

Moldova

65

1.953

-0.002

Kazakhstan

75

2.019

-0.028

Georgia

85

2.057

-0.015

Belarus

106

2.202

-0.035

Turkmenistan

106

2.202

0.000

Uzbekistan

109

2.216

-0.028

Armenia

110

2.218

-0.014

Tajikistan

122

2.293

0.021

Kyrgyz Republic

124

2.297

-0.003

Azerbaijan

134

2.450

0.006

10

Russia

151

3.079

-0.007

11

Ukraine

156

3.287

0.078

12

REGIONAL AVERAGE

2.356

SOUTH ASIA
South Asias position remained unchanged at eighth out of the
nine regions. Overall, the individual overall scores of
Afghanistan, Nepal and India deteriorated, while for Bhutan,
Sri Lanka and Pakistan, scores improved modestly. Internal
security concerns were heightened in Bangladesh and Nepal
owing to anti-government protests that have led to an increased
number of detainees. In terms of regional rank, most countries
have remained unchanged, with Bhutan remaining the most
peaceful and Afghanistan the least. Following the withdrawal of
most international forces from Afghanistan, the security
situation has remained volatile. Domestic security forces have
struggled to contain militant violence, which has posed threats
beyond Afghan borders. This has caused its relations with
neighbouring countries, particularly Pakistan, to deteriorate.
Despite the Pakistani governments crackdown on domestic
terrorist activities by Islamist militant groups, the country has
remained hostage to organised conflict, with rising numbers of
casualties over the past year. The influence of the Taliban from
Afghanistan has been particularly strong. As a result, Pakistan
remains second from the bottom in South Asia. Indias scores
for ongoing domestic and international conflict and
militarisation have deteriorated slightly. The country remains
vulnerable to acts of terror and security threats at its shared
border with Pakistan. As such, the number of deaths caused by
externally organised terror strikes has risen over the year. Sri
Lanka saw the greatest upswing in its score in the region. The
country successfully conducted two sets of elections in 2015
presidential in January and parliamentary in August which
brought a reformist administration with a strong mandate. The
countrys increased peacefulness is also due to better relations
with neighbouring countries, particularly India.

TABLE 1.8 SOUTH ASIA RANKINGS


COUNTRY

OVERALL
RANK

OVERALL
SCORE

CHANGE
IN SCORE

REGIONAL
RANK

Bhutan

13

1.445

-0.033

Nepal

78

2.026

0.058

Bangladesh

83

2.045

0.003

Sri Lanka

97

2.133

-0.053

India

141

2.566

0.006

Pakistan

153

3.145

-0.001

Afghanistan
REGIONAL AVERAGE

160

3.538

0.010

2.414

MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA


The Middle East and North Africa region, which was already
ranked the lowest in the GPI, saw the biggest deterioration in its
score in 2015, as the civil wars in Syria and Yemen deepened and
led to increased external intervention. Yemen, whose longstanding political crisis exploded into outright civil war in early
2015, witnessed a large slump, driven by the rising casualty rate, a
huge increase in refugees and internally displaced people, and
worsening terror attacks by both al-Qaeda in the Arabian

Peninsula and ISIL. Yemens travails have also affected the


rankings of some of the countrys neighbours; for example, the
UAEs military intervention in the war, which included
dispatching ground troops to southern Yemen, has affected that
countrys scores for ongoing domestic and international conflict
and militarisation. The growing role of foreign powers in Syrias
debilitating civil war, which has now led to the deaths of between
250,000 and 470,000 people, has had an impact, with, most
notably, Jordan launching waves of air strikes in January 2015
after one of its pilots was captured and executed by the Islamic
State. Likewise, despite its size, Bahrain has fully participated in
both the Yemen and Syria campaigns, which has in turn resulted
in an uptick in its military spending and driven its significant
score deterioration. Besides intervening abroad however,
governments are now having to respond to the growing domestic
threat posed by ISIL as demonstrated by the poorer terrorism
scores for Saudi Arabia, Libya, Tunisia and Egypt. The latter two
experienced a plunge in foreign arrivals following terrorist attacks
on tourist targets. Nevertheless, the regional trend is not
universally negative: Sudan, Iran and Oman, saw improvements
in their scores. In addition, improvements on the Political Terror
Scale and financial contributions to UN peacekeeping missions
helped Iran strengthen its score. Finally, despite the failure to
progress peace efforts with the Palestinians, a slight alleviation in
political instability and military expenditure as a percentage of
GDP helped garner a small improvement in Israels overall score.

TABLE 1.9 MIDDLE EAST & NORTH AFRICA RANKINGS


COUNTRY

OVERALL
RANK

OVERALL
SCORE

CHANGE
IN SCORE

REGIONAL
RANK

Qatar

34

1.716

-0.024

Kuwait

51

1.842

0.061

United Arab
Emirates

61

1.931

0.017

Tunisia

64

1.949

-0.024

Oman

74

2.016

-0.028

Morocco

91

2.086

0.017

Jordan

96

2.127

0.024

Algeria

108

2.213

-0.024

Saudi Arabia

129

2.338

0.042

Bahrain

132

2.398

0.072

10

Iran

133

2.411

-0.032

11

Egypt

142

2.574

0.047

12

Israel

144

2.656

-0.037

13

Lebanon

146

2.752

-0.002

14

Palestine

148

2.832

15

Libya

154

3.200

0.065

16

Sudan

155

3.269

-0.024

17

Yemen

158

3.399

0.151

18

Iraq

161

3.570

0.006

19

Syria

163

3.806

0.011

20

REGIONAL AVERAGE

2.554

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Results & Findings

17

RISERS
& FALLERS

Ongoing troubles in MENA resulted in three out of the five main


fallers coming from that region. Yemen had the largest drop in
the score, falling nine positions to 158th as its civil war expanded
into a regional conflict. Ukraine came in with the second largest
deterioration and was down four positions to 156th due to a
shaky truce between government and separatists. Turkey was the
next worse performer, falling seven slots to 145th due to
heightened conflict with its Kurdish population, deteriorated
relations with neighbouring countries (mainly Russia) and
increased terrorism impact. It was followed by Libya, down three
places to 154th on account of persisting factionalism, terrorism
and a rise in perceptions of criminality. Finally, Bahrain tumbled
23 positions on the index to 132nd due to worsening relations
with Iran, a rising rate of incarceration and a deterioration in the
ease of access to small arms and light weapons.

49

IA

RI

0.118

0.113

125

97

126

AU
R

0.120

UT

IT
AN

AF

KA
AN

SO

0.136

SR

TH

IL

AI

LA

AM

ND

CA

A lowered score signifies


an improved state
of peace

PA
N

Panama recorded the largest score improvement in this years


GPI, rising 24 positions in the rankings to 49th. It was followed
by Thailand, which rose nine positions (albeit to a still-low
125th). Sri Lanka was up by 18 places to 97th while South Africa
jumped seven slots to 126th. Mauritania was the next best
improver, gaining eight positions to 123rd. Across the top risers
there was an improvement in internal peace, with indicators
related to internal conflict improving in Mauritania, South
Africa and Sri Lanka, and reduced likelihood of violent
demonstrations in Panama, Sri Lanka and Thailand. However,
notwithstanding increased levels of internal stability, in some
cases this was not accompanied with a strengthening of
democracy (Thailand, South Africa and Mauritania all
deteriorated in the EIU Democracy Index). Finally, military
expenditure fell in all five countries except Thailand, while
relations with neighbouring countries improved in Sri Lanka
and Thailand.

Change in
score 2015/16

0.104
123

GPI rank
2016

132
154
145

156

+0.237

UK
158

RA

+0.161

+0.224

TU
IN

RK

+0.197

LIB
YA

BA
H

RA

IN

EY

+0.446

Across the top risers there was


an improvement in internal
peace, with indicators related
to internal conflict improving in
Mauritania, South Africa and
Sri Lanka.

18

YE

EN

An increased
score signifies
a deterioration
in the state of peace

SRI LANKA

TOP FIVE NATIONAL


IMPROVEMENTS IN PEACE

RANK 97

0.118

Change in score 2015/16

18

Change in rank 2015/16

PANAMA
Change in score 2015/16
Change in rank 2015/16

RANK 49

0.136

24

Panama was the country that improved most in the rankings both
in score and rank, with the main gain stemming from
improvements in its domestic situation. This was driven by a
reduction in the likelihood of violent demonstrations and to a lesser
extent, political instability as well as an improved performance on
the Political Terror Scale. There was also a corresponding decline
in the security officers and police rate although the overall score for
this indicator was still higher than the global average. A more
stable political environment after the February 2014 elections
contributed to this improvement in internal peace, as it has
coincided with initially strong support for president Juan Carlos
Varela, as well as large infrastructure projects that are currently
sustaining fast growth. The country also appeared less militarised
than in the previous year. There was a reduction in military
expenditure as a percentage of GDP as well as in the volume of
imports of major conventional weapons.

THAILAND
Change in score 2015/16
Change in rank 2015/16

RANK 125

0.120

Thailand had the second-highest absolute improvement in the


2016 GPI, although in relative terms it rose only nine places. Its
principal gains were in terms of its relations with neighbouring
countriesmainly Cambodia, with whom its relationship has
been a source of friction in the pastas well as a reduction in
the likelihood of violent demonstrations, the level of violent
crime, and the number of jailed population per 100,000 people,
although the latter remains among the highest in the world.
Thailand experienced a military coup dtat in 2014, but a
gradual return to normality following years of instability and
mass demonstration has been a positive factor in explaining the
countrys overall improvement. However, this has come at the
cost of an erosion of the Thailands democratic institutions as it
does not appear likely that the military will relinquish power
anytime soon. Furthermore, the country has seen an increase in
military spending as well as in the volume of imports of major
conventional weapons, and remains at risk of terrorism.

Sri Lanka saw strong gains in both internal and external peace,
enabling it to jump up 18 positions in the rankings, the
second-largest rank improvement overall. Improvements in
political instability, likelihood of violent demonstrations and
number and duration of internal conflicts all contributed to the
enhancement in its domestic situation. Driving these trends was
a strengthening of the countrys democratic institutions during
the administration of Maithripala Sirisena, who continues to
make strides in combating corruption and reverse the
authoritarianism of the previous administration. In addition,
his government has continued to pursue a strategy of ethnic
reconciliation following the end of the civil war in 2009. Sri
Lanka has improved its ties with India, which is reflected in an
improvement in its score for relationships with neighbouring
countries. Military expenditure has also been cut as threats to
internal stability gradually dissipate, but the countrys impact of
terrorism score deteriorated slightly.

SOUTH AFRICA

RANK 126

Change in score 2015/16


Change in rank 2015/16

0.113

South Africas domestic situation improved strongly in 2015,


lifting the overall score and pushing the country up seven places
in the ranking. Improvements in the intensity of organised
internal conflict and the Political Terror Scale were the main
drivers of growing levels of internal peace, even though, in
absolute terms, the scores for these indicators are weaker than
the global average and the country still suffers from major
institutional deficiencies that could hinder further consolidation
of peace. Its overall rank of 126th is the lowest among the five
biggest risers. There was some evidence of reduced
militarisation, including reduced weapons imports and exports
as well as lower military expenditure. Risk of underlying unrest
remained high in 2015, and was exacerbated by the countrys
high crime rate which was also reflected in a rise in the number
of jailed population per 100,000 people. Consolidation of power
by the ruling ANC and a weak and mistrusted security
apparatus will weigh on internal stability, which means the
country may find it hard to build on its progress going forward.

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Results & Findings

19

MAURITANIA

RANK 123

0.104

Change in score 2015/16

Change in rank 2015/16

Mauritanias improvements in its domestic situation


contributed strongly to the gains in the overall score, but it was
the improvement in ongoing conflict and militarisation scores
that was the main factor. Mauritania has been recovering from
its own internal conflicts and has occasionally been affected by
violent conflict in neighbouring countries, principally Mali.
Financial contributions to UN peacekeeping missions was the
biggest contributor to the improvement in its score. There has
also been a reduction in the deaths from internal conflict as well
as in the number and duration of internal conflicts due to
greater efforts by the government to tackle extremism. Despite
its heightened role in regional security, the country became less
militarised: military expenditure fell, as did the number of
armed services personnel, although this was partly offset by a
rise in weapons imports. The Political Terror Scale also
deteriorated as the government of Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz
cemented his authority.

UKRAINE
Change in score 2015/16
Change in rank 2015/16

YEMEN

TURKEY

Change in score 2015/16


Change in rank 2015/16

Change in rank 2015/16

RANK 158

+0.446
9

Yemen suffered by far the steepest deterioration in its GPI score.


In early 2015, its ongoing civil war escalated into a regional
conflict due to the intervention of a coalition of Arab states led by
Saudi Arabia and including almost every other Gulf state. This
resulted in a campaign of airstrikes and ground operations and,
coupled with the existing conflict between domestic factions, has
created a major humanitarian crisis. The result has been a
massive rise in the number of refugees and internally displaced
people as well as a rise in deaths from internal conflict. Societal
safety and security factors, including perceptions of criminality,
likelihood of violent demonstrations and the Political Terror
Scale, have also deteriorated significantly. The presence and
participation of al-Qaeda and ISIL affiliates further increases the
risk of terrorism and instability in the future.

20

+0.237

Ukraines GPI score deteriorated further in 2015 on account of


the continuation of the conflict with pro-Russian separatists in
the Donbas region that began in 2014. On the positive side,
there were greater efforts to end the fighting, notably after the
Minsk II agreement in February 2015, even though skirmishes
are a regular occurrence. A lasting settlement appears elusive,
however, owing to a reluctance to implement the peace deal
from both the Russian and Ukrainian sides. Most indicators
relating to domestic conflict deteriorated in 2015, as did the
Political Terror Scale. The country also became more
militarised: military expenditure as a share of GDP was up as
were weapons exports and the armed services personnel rate.
Ukraines internal stability also remains a cause for concern
given slow progress on tackling corruption and in reforming
state institutions.

Change in score 2015/16

TOP FIVE NATIONAL


DETERIORATIONS IN PEACE

RANK 156

RANK 145

+0.224
7

In 2015 Turkey suffered from a deepening of its internal security


woes, a continued hard-line approach by the government of
Recep Tayyip Erdoan and spillovers from the conflict in
neighbouring Syria. The main trigger for the deterioration in
the domestic situation was the resurgence of conflict between
the state and the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), as well as a
rise in terrorist activity, mostly on the part of ISIL. The intensity
of and the number of deaths from internal conflict have both
deteriorated. Erdoans tough stance against internal dissent
has resulted in an increase in the number of jailed population as
well as a rise in the number of security officers and police.
Turkeys relations with neighbouring countries also deteriorated
in 2015 on account of frictions with Russia after its Syrian
intervention. Turkey shot down a Russian attack aircraft which
allegedly strayed into its airspace in November 2015. It has also
been at odds with the EU over a solution to the refugee crisis.
Although elections in 2015 consolidated Erdoans authority, the
excessive concentration of power in his hands, together with the
numerous internal and external security threats, provides highly
unpredictable prospects for sustained peace.

LIBYA
Change in score 2015/16
Change in rank 2015/16

RANK 154

+0.197

Libya remains mired in the fallout from the 2011 NATO


intervention which, despite successful in its initial military
aims, left the country vulnerable to factionalism and infiltration
by terrorist groups. Governability had been rendered ineffective
as a result of warring factions that set up separate governments
in the eastern and western halves of the country. An additional
threat to peace is the presence of ISIL, among other jihadist
groups, which has taken advantage of the post-intervention
chaos to establish a foothold in the country. It is believed that
ISIL forces in Libya are the strongest outside of Syria and Iraq,
and the ineffectiveness of either existing government in
combating them represents a major threat to peace. A high level
of violent crime has been a major drag on the internal and
overall scores, as has been a rise in the Political Terror Scale
and, to a lesser extent, political instability. Meanwhile, the
scores for militarisation have deteriorated due to the sharp rise
in military expenditure and weapons imports, along with a
reduction in financial contributions to UN peacekeeping
missions.

BAHRAIN
Change in score 2015/16
Change in rank 2015/16

Yemen suffered by
far the steepest
deterioration in its
GPI score.

RANK 132

+0.161
23

Bahrain fell 23 positions in the overall ranking due to a


deterioration in ongoing conflict and militarisation scores. This
was driven by its participation in the Saudi-led coalition in
Yemen; the country has contributed both air and ground forces
to the operation, which likely contributed to its increasing
military expenditure and weapons imports. At the same time, a
downgrade of diplomatic ties with Iran explains a deterioration
in the score for relations with neighbouring countries. The
domestic situation also deteriorated as a result of a continuing
crackdown by the government of the king, Hamad bin Isa
al-Khalifa, against dissenterssome of whom have undertaken
peaceful opposition, while others have employed violence. As
part of this crackdown, the number of jailed population has
increased. Meanwhile, the ease of access to small arms has risen,
which could be a prelude to greater internal instability.
Notwithstanding the monarchys hard-line stance, it has
attempted to present itself as a moderate and reformist
institution, although it is still unclear (and unlikely) that this
will translate into an improvement in its domestic situation.

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Results & Findings

21

GPI DOMAIN & INDICATOR

ANNUAL CHANGES

The world became slightly less peaceful in 2016, with the average country
GPI score deteriorating by 0.53 per cent. This is the second straight year
that the average GPI score has slightly deteriorated, with the average levels
of peacefulness now very close to its low point, which was reached in 2012.
The world is now less peaceful than it was in 2008, as shown in
figure 1.2, with year-on-year levels of peacefulness having
declined in five out of the last eight years. Given the increasing
levels of terrorism and large population displacement caused by
internal conflict, this trend is likely to continue into at least the
near future.

The deterioration in peacefulness in 2016 was not evenly


distributed. In fact, more countries saw improvements in peace
than deteriorations, with 81 experiencing improvements
compared to the prior year, against 79 which became less
peaceful. However, the average deterioration in peacefulness was
larger than the average improvement, with 11 countries having

FIGURE 1.2 GPI OVERALL SCORE TREND AND YEAR-ON-YEAR PERCENTAGE CHANGE, 2008-2016

2.11
2.10
2.09

GPI OVERALL SCORE

More peaceful

Less peaceful

The world became less peaceful in 2016, and is now considerably less peaceful than in 2008.

2.08
2.07
2.06
2.05
2.04
2.03
2.02

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

1.32%
1.06%
0.53%

0.38%

0.24%

-0.24%
-0.43%

Source: IEP

22

-0.38%

FIGURE 1.3 GPI YEAR-ON-YEAR SCORE CHANGE AND COUNTRY CHANGES BY DOMAIN, 2015 2016
The ongoing conflict and societal safety and security domains both deteriorated on average, however, militarisation improved from
2015 to 2016.

Militarisation

GPI overall score

Safety & security

Ongoing conflict
-0.020

-0.005

0.000

0.005

0.010

0.015

0.020

0.025

CHANGE IN AVERAGE DOMAIN SCORE, 2015 TO 2016


More peaceful

Less peaceful
1

76

84

79
86

Militarisation

77

81

GPI overall score

54

Safety & security

54
54

No change
Less peaceful
More peaceful

Ongoing conflict

Source: IEP

deteriorations of greater than five per cent, compared to only four


countries with improvements of greater than five per cent.
Looking at the three GPI domains of societal safety and security,
ongoing conflict and militarisation, the average deterioration was
also larger than the average improvement. The societal safety and
security and ongoing conflict domains both recorded significant
deteriorations, as shown in figure 1.3. Deteriorations on the
ongoing conflict domain were largely concentrated in a small
handful of countries, most notably Egypt and Turkey. Five of the
ten largest deteriorations on this domain occurred in countries
from the Middle East and North Africa region. Whilst the
militarisation domain did improve, the size of the improvement
was much smaller.
The largest single indicator deterioration was terrorism impact,
which declined by nearly ten per cent, as shown in figure 1.4.
The average terrorism impact indicator score has now
deteriorated for four years in a row and is over 20 per cent
worse than in 2008. Increases in terrorist activity occurred
across a number of regions, with prominent attacks occurring in
France, Belgium, Turkey and Pakistan in the last six months
alone. In total, 77 countries recorded a deterioration in the
impact of terrorism, and of the 25 largest increases, nine
occurred in OECD countries.

The average political instability score deteriorated by just


under five per cent, with large deteriorations in Djibouti,
Guinea-Bissau and Poland. However, there was an improvement
in Egypt, Nigeria and Sudan, three countries which have
suffered from significant instability in recent years. The one
other indicator to show a significant deterioration was the
Political Terror Scale, with notable deteriorations in Greece,
Argentina, South Korea, Ukraine and Yemen. However, the
average Political Terror Scale score of 2.58 is still better than the
worst year in 2009.
Both military expenditure and external conflicts fought
deteriorated by around four per cent in 2016, highlighting an
increase in external conflict. However, these deteriorations
come on the back of several years of improvement in both
indicators, particularly military expenditure. The deterioration
in external conflicts fought was driven by countries becoming
embroiled in already existing regional conflicts, with Jordans
strong military response to ISIL leading it to have the largest
overall deterioration. In MENA, Bahrain, the United Arab
Emirates and Saudi Arabia also became more strongly involved
in regional conflict, whilst in sub-Saharan Africa, Niger, Chad,
South Sudan and Cameroon experienced significant
deteriorations in their external conflicts fought score.

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Results & Findings

23

FIGURE 1.4 FIVE LARGEST INDICATOR IMPROVEMENTS AND DETERIORATIONS, 2015 - 2016
Of the indicators that changed the most from 2015 to 2016, terrorism and political instability had the largest deteriorations, with only
UN peacekeeping funding showing a large improvement.

UN peacekeeping funding
Security officers and police
Violent crime
Incarceration
Violent demonstrations
External conflicts fought
Military expenditure
Political Terror Scale
Refugees and IDPs
Terrorism impact
-0.15

-0.10

-0.05

-0.00

0.05

0.10

CHANGE IN AVERAGE INDICATOR SCORE, 2015 TO 2016


More peaceful

Less peaceful

Source: IEP

Of the indicators that improved the most, the largest single


improvement occurred in the UN peacekeeping funding
indicator, followed by the security officers and police rate
indicator. According to the most recently available data, the
security officers and police rate decreased in 37 countries and
increased in just 24, with the largest reductions in police force
size occurring in Kazakhstan, Moldova and France. The security
officers and police rate also declined in the United States for the
fourth consecutive year, with the country now scoring well
below the global average on this indicator.
After several years of deterioration, the violent demonstrations
and violent crime indicators both improved slightly. There was a

24

significant fall in the chance of violent demonstrations in Nigeria,


Panama, Sudan and Uruguay, albeit with a concurrent increase
in Yemen, Senegal, Nepal, Djibouti, Cote dIvoire and Burundi.
The violent crime indicator improved in 13 countries and
deteriorated in just five, although the largest absolute change
occurred in Libya, where the violent crime indicator moved
from 3.5 to the maximum possible score of 5. Libya is now one
of only 20 countries to have the worst possible score on the
violent crime indicator.

TRENDS
IN PEACE

THE WORLD HAS BECOME 2.44% LESS PEACEFUL SINCE 2008


What has been driving the change in peacefulness?

32,715

DETERIORATIONS

8,466

286%

Deaths from terrorism increased by

5
101,406

19,601

BATTLE DEATHS

INCREASED

OVER FIVE FOLD

In 2015, the UNHCR recorded


over 57 million:
- refugees
- internally-displaced people,
- and others of concern

60
50
40
30
20
10
0

IMPROVEMENTS

34%

65%
24

106

countries

reduced military expenditure as a % of GDP.

HIGHLIGHTS

The world has become less peaceful over the last decade, with a
deterioration of 2.44 per cent in the average country GPI score.
The fall in peacefulness was not evenly distributed
around the globe. Seventy-seven countries actually
became more peaceful over this period compared
to 85 which deteriorated. Most of the deterioration
in peacefulness was concentrated in four areas: the
Middle East and North Africa, northern sub-Saharan
Africa, Central America and the countries dividing
Russia from Europe, particularly Ukraine.
The region with the largest deterioration in
peacefulness was the Middle East and North Africa.
It had the largest average deterioration on seven of
the 23 GPI indicators. Most of these changes were
linked to the conflict in Syria and the increase in the
number of refugees and IDPs.
On average, internal indicators deteriorated while
external indicators improved. The biggest
deteriorations occurred in terrorism impact,
refugees and IDPs and deaths from internal conflict,
while the biggest improvements occurred in military
expenditure, armed service personnel rate and
external conflicts fought.
Two indicators improved by more than ten per cent,
external conflicts fought and UN peacekeeping
funding.
The terrorism impact indicator had the greatest
overall deterioration, with all but two regions
recoding an increase in terrorism over the past
decade.
The total number of deaths from terrorism rose from
less than 10,000 in 2008 to over 30,000 in 2014.
Terrorism is at historical levels, battle deaths are at a

Internal peace and the societal safety and security


domain declined every year for the past eight years.
The armed services personnel rate declined in 39 of
the 51 countries classified as authoritarian regimes
since 2008.
The number of refugees and IDPs indicator,
deteriorated across all regions and for all
government types since 2008.
Nine countries have more than ten per cent of their
population displaced in some form, with Somalia
and South Sudan both having more than 20 per cent
and Syria over 60 per cent.
In the long term trend, since the end of the Second
World War, there have been a number of positive
and negative trends in peacefulness.
Firstly, there has been a shift away from conflict
between nations to conflict within nations, with a
parallel shift away from external militarisation to a
focus on internal security.
As internal conflict became more prominent,
external parties are now more likely to become
involved, or to suffer from the consequences of
violence as local conflicts turn into regional or even
continental crises.
Finally, while societal safety and security has been
improving, there has been a large increase in
expenditure related to containing violence, such as
policing and incarceration over the past 50 years, as
an absolute inflation-adjusted figure, and also as a
percentage of total government spending.

25 year high, and the number of refugees is at a


level not seen in sixty years.

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Trends in Peace

25

TRENDS IN PEACE
SINCE 2008

The overall trend for the past nine years recorded a decrease in
peacefulness across multiple domains, regions and indicators. The
deteriorating trend in peacefulness was dominated by decreases in
internal security in the MENA region. Of the improvements in
peacefulness, the majority occurred on indicators related to external
peace and militarisation, with both average military expenditure and the
armed services personnel rate improving over the past decade.
Figure 2.1 shows an index chart of the percentage change by
domain and subdomain from 2008. While all of the domains
initially deteriorated over the first two years of the index, both
external peace and militarisation improved over the past five
years. This was driven by increases in UN peacekeeping
funding, smaller numbers of army personnel and reduced
military spending. By contrast, internal peace and safety and
security declined every year for the past eight years, and
although there was some improvement on the ongoing conflict
domain from 2010 to 2015, recent increases in conflict mean
that the average ongoing conflict domain score is two per cent
higher in 2016 than in 2008.

The change in peacefulness since 2008 was not equally


distributed across countries, regions and government types as
shown in table 2.1. At the indicator level, the greatest change
occurred on terrorism impact, which deteriorated in every
region other than South Asia. There was a deterioration of over
15 per cent in seven regions, and deterioration across all four
government classifications: full democracy, flawed democracy,
hybrid regimes and authoritarian regimes. The only other
indicator that deteriorated across nearly as many regions and
government types was the refugees and IDPs indicator, which
deteriorated across eight regions and for all government types
other than full democracies. Of the indicators that improved,
the armed services personnel rate fell in seven regions, as did
UN peacekeeping funding.

FIGURE 2.1 GPI SCORE CHANGE BY DOMAIN, 2008 2016

More peaceful
Less peaceful

PERCENTAGE CHANGE SINCE 2008

While external peace and militarisation improved slightly, internal peace and societal safety and security
had large deteriorations.
-3

-1

External peace

0
1

Ongoing conflict

2
3

Internal peace
Safety & security

4
5

Source: IEP

26

Militarisation

-2

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

TABLE 2.1 PERCENTAGE CHANGE MATRIX FOR ALL GPI INDICATORS AND DOMAINS BY REGION AND GOVERNMENT TYPE,
2008 TO 2016

AUTHORITARIAN REGIME

FLAWED DEMOCRACY

2.1%

2.5%

2.3%

5.7%

-1.0%

-0.5%

2.0%

Safety & security

0.5%

3.0%

1.5%

14.2%

-2.2%

-1.2%

5.7%

3.1%

4.3%

6.7%

1.7%

0.8%

3.5%

Ongoing conflict

-3.4%

3.4%

-4.7%

20.6%

-13.3%

-0.3%

-3.8%

-0.9%

1.5%

8.4%

-3.5%

-7.6%

0.5%

Militarisation

-6.7%

-0.6%

-2.7%

1.5%

0.6%

-1.7%

-2.3%

3.9%

-3.9%

-1.9%

-4.8%

4.5%

-2.0%

Perceptions of criminality

1.9%

34.3%

4.4%

22.0%

0.0%

-2.6%

13.9%

4.5%

4.3%

9.6%

7.5%

5.3%

8.7%

Police

6.2%

-7.2%

-3.8%

11.1%

-13.6%

-6.5%

4.8%

18.4%

0.7%

6.9%

-1.7%

2.0%

-3.0%

-4.9%

5.4%

-9.2%

-1.7%

-12.9%

-14.3%

-1.8%

-3.9%

-0.7%

0.7%

-4.6%

-4.9%

-6.0%

5.8%

20.6%

2.1%

1.4%

-0.1%

-11.7%

24.7%

10.3%

1.3%

3.7%

3.9%

-0.8%

8.5%

Access to firearms

-8.5%

2.4%

-0.6%

11.4%

0.0%

0.0%

2.7%

0.0%

-3.6%

0.8%

-1.0%

0.0%

-1.7%

Intensity of internal conflict

-4.8%

13.6%

1.9%

31.1%

0.0%

0.0%

14.3%

-6.4%

1.2%

13.0%

5.5%

-5.0%

-2.9%

Violent demonstrations

6.5%

-10.8%

14.5%

18.3%

33.3%

5.7%

4.3%

15.2%

4.8%

6.0%

8.3%

11.5%

7.6%

Violent crime

-2.1%

1.1%

2.3%

21.3%

0.0%

-8.8%

5.6%

-4.8%

8.4%

7.8%

3.0%

-7.3%

3.4%

Political instability

-8.5%

-11.2%

13.4%

4.2%

0.0%

3.9%

-5.7%

-3.1%

4.1%

3.5%

-0.4%

5.3%

-1.4%

Political terror scale

-2.9%

-7.6%

-15.3%

3.6% -25.0%

7.5%

-3.4%

-3.9%

-2.2%

0.9%

-8.7%

-12.5%

-2.9%

7.9%

9.2%

-10.4%

19.7%

3.8%

22.2%

7.0%

17.3%

8.1%

23.8%

-7.6%

-0.2%

13.7%

Terrorism

21.7%

7.8%

24.1%

26.9%

39.9%

16.4%

13.6%

-3.6%

30.6%

22.4%

16.5%

25.5%

23.2%

Internal conflicts fought

-4.2%

24.8%

-1.6%

4.5%

0.0%

10.5%

-19.3%

-6.7%

-3.0%

1.4%

-8.6%

-1.6%

-0.5%

Conflicts deaths (internal)

10.4%

33.3%

-2.7%

44.4%

0.0%

41.9%

-2.4%

3.7%

14.7%

27.4%

1.9%

0.0%

21.5%

Military expenditure

-17.6%

4.4%

-11.5%

5.8%

-12.5%

-0.8%

-7.3%

7.9%

-6.4%

-3.8%

-9.1%

-5.2%

-1.4%

Armed services personnel

-4.5%

2.2%

-5.6% -20.0%

-4.6%

-2.0%

-0.8%

6.2%

-3.2%

-9.8%

-3.1%

-5.2%

-3.4%

UN peacekeeping funding

-22.9%

-16.3%

6.2%

-9.0%

-14.8% -23.8%

-16.7%

10.4%

-12.4%

-15.4%

-11.4%

13.2%

-11.9%

Nuclear and heavy weapons

0.6%

-0.1%

-6.4%

-4.6%

-0.3%

-5.3%

0.7%

0.2%

0.9%

-2.5%

-1.4%

-5.1%

-1.1%

Weapons exports

7.5%

0.0%

5.6%

0.9%

13.4%

10.8%

0.4%

-0.1%

0.7%

3.0%

-5.3%

24.7%

2.6%

Refugees and IDPs

1.9%

11.4%

2.6%

83.8%

0.0%

29.2%

35.9%

26.6%

15.7%

29.8%

11.1%

0.0%

26.9%

Neighbouring country relations

1.1%

-8.3%

8.8%

20.1%

0.0%

5.0%

-13.0%

5.6%

-6.1%

5.7%

1.8%

-5.0%

0.5%

-20.9%

-35.7%

-31.5%

24.7%

-4.1%

-49.5%

0.0%

4.6%

45.5%

15.0%

-31.4%

-15.2%

-7.2%

-4.8%

-1.1%

-4.9%

6.0%

-39.5%

2.4%

0.0%

7.5%

0.0%

-1.4%

0.3%

-13.3%

2.4%

Homicide
Incarceration

Weapons imports

External conflicts fought


Conflict deaths (external)

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Trends in Peace

HYBRID REGIME

SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA

-0.6%

FULL DEMOCRACY

SOUTH ASIA

-4.8%

RUSSIA AND EURASIA

13.9%

NORTH AMERICA

-1.3%

EUROPE

2.3%

CENTRAL AMERICA AND


CARIBBEAN

-2.0%

ASIA-PACIFIC

GPI overall score

INDICATOR

SOUTH AMERICA

MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA

Terrorism deteriorated across most regions, while the Middle East and North Africa had the largest number of indicators deteriorating.

27

Regionally, the largest deteriorations occurred in the Middle East


and North Africa, which deteriorated on average across 19 of the
23 indicators. Many of the deteriorations in the region were
highly correlated, as increasing internal conflict led to increasing
perceptions of criminality, higher levels of violent crime, greater
government repression, the outbreak of terrorism and
widespread population displacement. While the average GPI
score in the Middle East and North Africa deteriorated by 14 per
cent, no other region had an improvement or deterioration of
more than five per cent.

deaths. There were also smaller deteriorations for the intensity


of internal conflict, violent demonstrations and perceptions of
criminality indicators. No indicator improved by more than 15
per cent, with only external conflicts fought and UN
peacekeeping funding improving by more than ten per cent.
The past decade has seen a continuation of longer term trends
in peacefulness away from external conflicts between states and
towards more internal conflicts within states. Although it is too
early to state whether the decrease in peacefulness represents a
reversal of the long peace that started at the end of the Second
World War, there are a number of worrying signs that suggest
conflict could escalate. The increase in terrorism across regions
highlights the ability of terrorist groups to export violence
beyond national boundaries, as demonstrated by the increase in
terrorist attacks in OECD countries in the past year. Similarly,
the entanglement of more nations into the Syrian conflict,
coupled with the enormous outflow of displaced people, shows
that even internal conflicts cannot be quarantined and their
repercussions can be felt across borders and even continents.

Figure 2.2 depicts the percentage change in average indicator score


for those indicators that improved or deteriorated by more than
five per cent. In total, ten indicators had large fluctuations, with six
deteriorating and four improving. All four indicators that improved
are measures of external peacefulness, while five of the six
indicators that deteriorated are measures of internal peacefulness.
The single greatest indicator change occurred on terrorism
impact, which deteriorated by more than 20 per cent on
average, followed by refugees and IDPs and internal conflict

FIGURE 2.2 GPI PERCENTAGE CHANGE FROM 2008 TO 2016 BY INDICATOR

More peaceful
Less peaceful

PERCENTAGE CHANGE SINCE 2008

Six indicators deteriorated by more than five per cent, with four improving by more than five per cent.
-20%

External conflicts fought


UN peacekeeping funding

-15%
-10%

Armed services personnel


Military expenditure

-5%
0%

Intensity of internal conflict


Violent demonstrations
Perceptions of criminality

5%
10%
15%

Conflicts deaths (internal)

20%

Refugees and IDPs


Terrorism impact

25%
2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

Source: IEP

The single greatest indicator change occurred on terrorism impact, which


deteriorated by more than 20 per cent on average, followed by refugees and IDPs
and internal conflict deaths.

28

INDICATOR
TRENDS

TERRORISM

While still accounting for a small percentage of the total


number of violent deaths, terrorism has grown steadily over the
past decade. The number of yearly incidents has almost tripled
since 2011, and the number of deaths has increased to over
30,000. The total level of terrorist activity increased by 80 per
cent from 2013 to 2014, the largest increase in the years covered
by the Global Terrorism Database, which has data back to 1970.
Estimates created by IEP suggest that the level of terrorism
shows no sign of abating in 2015 and early 2016.

FIGURE 2.3 TERRORIST INCIDENTS AND DEATHS FROM


TERRORISM, 2006-2014
The number of deaths from terrorism has risen dramatically
since 2011, from under 10,000 to over 30,000.
35,000

Deaths

30,000

Incidents

15,000
10,000
5,000
-

2006

2008

2010

2012

Although there are many hundreds of active terrorist groups in


the world, most are responsible for only a few deaths or no
deaths at all. The responsibility for the majority of deaths comes
from just a few large terrorist groups, with Boko Haram and
ISIL being responsible for over 50 per cent of deaths by known
actors. Both of these groups also function as combatants in
existing civil and territorial disputes, with ISIL being involved
in more than 20,000 battle-related deaths in addition to over
6,000 deaths from terrorism.
The past year has also seen a large increase in the number of
deaths from terrorism in the west. The number of deaths from
terrorism has more than doubled in Europe (excluding Turkey)
over the last five years, with the vast majority of these deaths
occurring in early 2016. France, Belgium and the US have all
experienced a significant terrorist attack in the last six months.
Prior to the recent upswing in terrorism in the West, the majority
of deaths from terrorism in Europe and North America since
2001 were caused by lone wolf attacks, usually from individuals
with radical nationalist and anti-government ideologies.

25,000
20,000

The majority of terrorist activity is highly concentrated in five


countries: Iraq, Nigeria, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Syria.
Between them these countries accounted for 78 per cent of
deaths from terrorism in 2014. However, there are signs that
terrorism is becoming more common across the globe, with
almost every region having an increase in its terrorism impact
score from 2008 to 2016. The number of countries with over
500 deaths from terrorism increased from five to 11 between
2013 and 2014. At the other end of the scale, the number of
countries which recorded no terrorist incidents at all decreased
from 49 in 2008, to 37 in 2016 out of 163 countries.

2014

Source: Global Terrorism Database

FIGURE 2.4 DEATHS FROM TERRORISM IN EUROPE (EXCLUDING TURKEY) AND NORTH AMERICA, 2006 TO 2015/16
In the last five years the number of deaths from terrorism has doubled compared to the previous five years in both Europe
and North America.

DEATHS FROM TERRORISM

300

2012-2016
(281)

North America

250

Europe

200
2006-2011
(126)

150

2012-2016
(79)

100
2006-2011
(24)

50
0

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015/16

Europe

North America

Source: IEP, Global Terrorism Database

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Trends in Peace

29

REFUGEES AND IDPS

The increase in conflict over the last decade has resulted in a very
large increase in the number of refugees and internally displaced
people (IDPs), with the number of refugees increasing from 9.8
million in 2006 to over 15 million in 2015, a 52 per cent increase
in under a decade. The increase in the number of IDPs was even
more dramatic, rising from just under 12.8 million in 2006, to 34
million in 2015, an increase of 166 per cent.
FIGURE 2.5 TOTAL REFUGEES, IDPS AND OTHER
POPULATIONS OF CONCERN TO UNHCR

REFUGEES, IDPS, AND OHTERS


OF CONCERN, MILLIONS

The number of refugees, IDPs, and other populations of


concern has almost doubled since 2007.
70
60
50
40

DEATHS FROM INTERNAL CONFLICT

Others of Concern
IDPs
Refugees

30
20
10
0
2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

Source: UNHCR

The conflict in Syria was responsible for the vast majority of this
increase. In 2007, just 0.1 per cent of the Syrian population was
classified as refugees or IDPs. This figure rose to an
extraordinary 63.18 per cent in 2015. The majority of these were
internally displaced, although in 2015 and 2016 an increasing
number began to leave the country, triggering the so-called
European refugee crisis.
Whilst no other country comes close to having as many refugees
and IDPs as a percentage of its population as Syria, there are
nine other countries with more than ten per cent of their
population displaced in some form, with Somalia and South
Sudan both having more than twenty per cent of their
population displaced. The majority of these countries are in the
Middle East and North Africa, South Asia, or sub-Saharan
Africa regions, with only Colombia and Cyprus being located
outside of these three areas.
State failure, conflict and terrorism were the major drivers of the
increase in refugees and IDPs, with the largest increases coming in
countries engaged in protracted civil conflict. Outside of Syria,
conflicts in Yemen, Libya, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and
Ukraine all led to huge increases in the displaced population, from
below one per cent to 9.3, 6.8, 4.3, and 3.9 per cent respectively.

30

The vast majority of refugees from conflict in the Middle East


and North Africa are being hosted in nearby countries, with
Turkey alone hosting an estimated 1.8 million refugees.
Pakistan, Lebanon and Iran all hosted over or close to a million
refugees as of mid-2015. There has been a large increase in the
number of refugees seeking asylum in Europe, with UNHCR
estimates suggesting that over a million refugees reached
Europe by sea alone in 2015. The majority of asylum claims in
Europe are being processed in Germany, with an estimated
159,900 asylum applications in the first half of 2015 alone.
However, on a per capita basis Sweden is the European country
which has taken in the most refugees, with approximately 1.5
per cent of the population being refugees in mid-2015.

The number of deaths from internal conflict increased


considerably over the last decade, rising from just under 36,000
in 2005-2006 to over 305,000 in 2014-2015. The majority of
this increase is the result of conflict in Syria. Even if internal
deaths from Syria are excluded from the calculations there was
still a near five-fold increase in internal conflict deaths over the
history of the GPI. Sri Lanka, India, Chad, Ethiopia and
Colombia were the only countries that saw significant
reductions in the number of deaths from internal conflict.
Conversely, 16 countries had increases of over 1,000 deaths,
with the largest increases occurring in Syria, Mexico, Iraq,
Nigeria and Afghanistan.
Figure 2.6 highlights the nine countries with the largest increase
in the number of deaths from internal conflict, excluding Syria.
Mexico had an explosion of violence after the government
initiated crackdown on cartel activity in 2007, and although the
country has begun to become more peaceful over the last few
years, the conflict still claimed over 30,000 lives in 2013-2014,
which is just under the total number of people killed in terrorist
incidents worldwide. The formation of ISIL led to a resurgence of
deaths in Iraq, rising to over 32,000 and there was also a
re-escalation of the conflict environment in Afghanistan, which
experienced a 427 per cent increase in yearly internal conflict
deaths from the 2008 GPI to the 2016 GPI, from 4210 to 22,170.
Of the nine countries (excluding Syria) with the most internal
conflict deaths in the 2016 GPI, only three had a significant
number of deaths nine years prior, with the rest experiencing
breakouts of entirely new conflicts. In Nigeria, Boko Haram
became the deadliest terrorist organisation in the world in 2014,
seriously threatening the countrys internal stability. On top of
terrorism, in 2014 Nigeria had 18,000 deaths from internal
conflict. In Yemen, the long simmering Houthi insurgency first
led to the Yemeni revolution in 2011, followed by the still
ongoing Yemeni civil war. The number of internal conflict
deaths has risen steadily as a result of this escalation, leading to
over 10,000 deaths in the last two years.

Of the nine countries


(excluding Syria) with
the most internal
conflict deaths in the
2016 GPI, only three
had a significant
number of deaths nine
years prior, with the
rest experiencing
breakouts of entirely
new conflicts.

FIGURE 2.6 COUNTRIES WITH THE MOST INTERNAL CONFLICT DEATHS, 2016
(EXCLUDING SYRIA)
Of the nine countries (excluding Syria) with the most internal conflict deaths in the
2016 GPI, only four had any internal conflict deaths in 2008.

Mexico
Iraq
Afghanistan
Nigeria
Yemen

2016 GPI

South Sudan
Ukraine

2008 GPI

Central African Republic


Pakistan
0

5,000

10,000

15,000

20,000

25,000

30,000

35,000

Source: IEP, IISS Armed Conflict Database

EXTERNAL CONFLICTS FOUGHT

The average external conflicts fought score fell 15 per cent


between 2008 and 2016, from 1.71 to 1.48, as shown in figure 2.7.
The external conflicts fought indicator measures not only the
number of external conflicts, but also the duration and role that
states have in conflicts outside of their own borders.

coalitions, but a number of countries withdrew from their roles


in more prominent external conflicts, leading to an
improvement in the overall score.
In 2010, 58 nation states were involved in 206 external
conflicts. Multiple groups can be involved in a conflict with each
conflict pairing being recorded separately. In 2014, this number
had increased to 85 states involved in 310 conflicts. Of the 210
conflict pairings that were active in 2010, only 111 were still
active in 2014, with 199 being new conflict pairings.

The average external conflicts score improved from 2008 to


2016. However, the number of states involved in external
conflicts actually increased over this period even though the
average duration of conflicts and the role played by external
actors fell. More countries entered into smaller roles in

FIGURE 2.7 AVERAGE EXTERNAL CONFLICTS FOUGHT INDICATOR SCORE,


2008 TO 2016 GPI
The average external conflicts fought score fell 15 per cent, with the largest decrease
occurring between 2010 2015.
EXTERNAL CONFLICTS FOUGHT
BANDED SCORE

Less peaceful

More peaceful

1.9
1.8
1.7
1.6
1.5
1.4
1.3
1.2
1.1
1.0
2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

Source: IEP

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Trends in Peace

31

16 per cent, and both flawed democracies and hybrid regimes


showed average improvements of over ten per cent.

ARMED SERVICES PERSONNEL AND


MILITARY EXPENDITURE

The fall in the armed service personnel rate was not strongly
correlated with a fall in military expenditure, with many countries
increasing weapons expenditure outlay while also reducing the
total number of troops, reflecting a longer term shift away from
larger standing armies to more technology and capital intensive
weapons systems. Figure 2.9 highlights the change in average
military expenditure by government type from 2008 to 2016.

The average armed services personnel indicator declined from


2008 to 2014, as several countries sought to cut back on military
expenditure and reduce the size of their standing armies. This is a
continuation of a trend that began almost twenty years ago, with
the number of active military personnel dropping from over 30
million in 1995 to under 29 million in 2011.

The average level of military expenditure as a percentage of


GDP declined in both full democracies and flawed democracies.
However, there was considerably more variation in the trend in
authoritarian regimes and hybrid regimes, which both
experienced steep declines from 2010 to 2012, followed by a
steady increase in military expenditure for the past four years.
The largest increase over the full time period occurred in
Afghanistan, where military expenditure rose from 1.66 per cent
of GDP to 15.75 per cent in less than a decade. Libya, Oman,
Algeria and Syria also had large increases.

Figure 2.8 shows the change in the average armed services


personnel rate by government type. All four government types
experienced a fall in the average armed service personnel rate, with
the biggest average fall occurring in authoritarian regimes, which
fell by 18 per cent. Part of this fall can be explained by the
dissolution or fragmentation of government forces in Syria and
Libya, however, the armed services personnel rate fell in 48 of the
51 countries classified as authoritarian regimes. The second biggest
improvement occurred in full democracies, with an average fall of

FIGURE 2.8 CHANGE IN AVERAGE ARMED SERVICES PERSONNEL RATE BY


GOVERNMENT TYPE, 2008-2016
All four government types experienced falls in the armed forces rate over the past
decade.
ARMED SERVICES PERSONNEL
PER 100,000 PEOPLE

800
700
600

Authoritarian
regime

500

Flawed
democracy

400

Hybrid regime
Full democracy

300
200

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

The fall in the armed


service personnel
rate was not strongly
correlated with a fall
in military
expenditure.

2016

Source: UNODC, IEP Calculations

FIGURE 2.9 CHANGE IN AVERAGE MILITARY EXPENDITURE (%GDP) BY GOVERNMENT TYPE, 2008 - 2016
Military expenditure increased as a percentage of GDP in authoritarian regimes, but fell in full and flawed
democracies.
MILITARY EXPENDITURE (% GDP)

4.0

Authoritarian regime

3.5
3.0
2.5

Hybrid regime

2.0

Flawed democracy
Full democracy

1.5
1.0
0.5
0.0
2008

2009

Source: IISS, IEP Calculations

32

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

LONG-TERM
TRENDS
There is a strong consensus that even though the world has become much
less violent since the end of the Second World War, the last decade has seen
an increase in conflict and violence, although whether this is a temporary
reversal or the start of a new longer-term trend remains to be seen.
Many of the approaches to measuring peace focus on conflict
and war, ignoring the other dimensions affecting peacefulness,
particularly those indicators that measure resources devoted to
containing or dealing with violence, such as internal security,
police, incarceration or counter-terrorism. While lower levels of
violence can be achieved by increasing spending in these areas,
this does not necessarily represent a more peaceful world if this
decline in violence has only been achieved by devoting more
resources to security.
Reconstructing a version of the GPI back to the end of the
Second World War is not possible, owing to large data gaps
across both indicators and countries. However, it is possible to
assemble the existing data and group these datasets into the

three GPI subdomains: ongoing conflict, militarisation and


societal safety and security. This data suggests that even though
the world has become less violent over the last 60 years, this fall
in violence has been offset by an increase in spending on
services that aim to contain violence.
Over the past five hundred years there has been a shift away
from conflict between states (external conflict) to conflict within
states (internal conflict). Figure 2.10 shows the ten year moving
average for states involved in internal and external conflicts over
the past five hundred years.
The last 60 years have seen the number of internal conflicts not
only increase, but also overtake the number of external conflicts.

FIGURE 2.10 NUMBER OF COUNTRIES INVOLVED IN AN INTERNAL OR EXTERNAL CONFLICT, 1500 - 2000
In the last 50 years, the number of countries involved in internal conflicts overtook the number of countries involved in external
conflicts.

NUMBER OF COUNTRIES INVOLVED IN A CONFLICT

40

Internal Conflicts
Ten Year Moving Average

35

30

25

External Conflicts
10 Year Moving Average

20

15

10

0
1500

1550

1600

1650

1700

1750

1800

1850

1900

1950

2000

Source: CLIO-INFRA, IEP Calculations

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Trends in Peace

33

This shift away from external conflict towards internal conflict


is also reflected in figure 2.11 which shows the ten year moving
sum of territorial changes by type.
The number of territory changes that were classified as either
conquests or annexations peaked in the early 20th century, with
only a brief resurgence in the mid-1970s. In the last decade
there have only been three territory changes classified as
conquests, three changes that involved a military conflict and a
general decline in the number of overall territory changes. This
lends credence to both the theory that the world has become
more peaceful and also that direct conflicts between nations are
becoming much rarer.

GPI DOMAIN TRENDS

ONGOING DOMESTIC &


INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT
The trend away from external and towards internal conflicts can
be seen in figure 2.12, which shows a more detailed account of
armed conflicts, which are defined as a conflict that caused
more than 25 battle deaths in any one year from 1946 to 2014.
The decline in the number of interstate and extrasystematic is
clear, as is the rise of internal conflicts. Overall, the total number
of active serious armed conflicts has declined from a peak of 51
conflicts in 1991 to 40 in 2014, although this is the highest
number of active conflicts since 1999. In addition, there has been
a clear rise in the number of internationalised internal conflicts,
which were just three per cent of total conflicts in 1991, but
constituted 32.5 per cent of total conflicts in 2014.

The total number of conflicts has jumped sharply in the past few
years, rising from 31 in 2010 to 40 in 2014. This increase in the
number of internal conflicts has led to a concurrent rise in battle
deaths. In 2014, owing largely to the conflict in Syria but also the
increasingly protracted conflict in Yemen, battle deaths hit a 25
year high, with this number likely to increase when 2015 data are
released. Figure 2.13 highlights the total number of battles deaths
from 1946 to 2014, as well as the past 25 years in isolation.
Although the majority of deaths in 2014 occurred in Syria, there
were a number of other conflicts that resulted in high numbers
of battle deaths. In total, 11 conflicts resulted in more than a
thousand deaths each in 2014, with conflict in Iraq and
Afghanistan resulting in more than 10,000 deaths each.

BOX 2.1 WHAT ARE THE DIFFERENT TYPES OF CONFLICT?

The UCDP-PRIO Armed Conflict Dataset classifies


conflicts in four different ways:
Extrasystemic armed conflict occurs between a
state and a non-state group outside its own territory,
for example, colonial wars or wars of independence.
Interstate armed conflict occurs between two or
more states.
Internal armed conflict occurs between the
government of a state and one or more internal
opposition groups without intervention from other
states.
Internationalised internal armed conflict occurs
between the government of a state and one or more
internal opposition groups with intervention from
other states on one or both sides.

FIGURE 2.11 TERRITORIAL CHANGES BY TYPE AND WHETHER A MILITARY CONFLICT WAS INVOLVED, TEN YEAR SUM, 1825-2014

NUMBER OF TERRITORIAL CHANGES (TEN YEAR SUM)

Since the mid-1970s the number of territorial changes categorized as conquests has dropped to almost zero.
100
90
80

Other

Secession

Annexation

Conquest

70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
1825

1850

Source: Correlates of War Database

34

1875

1900

1925

1950

1975

2000

While the total number of battle deaths did reach a 25 year high in
2014, the last 25 years have been relatively peaceful compared to
the preceding 25. From the period 1990 to 2014, there were more
than 50,000 deaths in a year on six occasions. By contrast, from
1965 to 1989 there were more than 50,000 deaths on 24 occasions.

chart including the Rwandan genocide and the right hand chart
excluding it.
If the Rwandan genocide data is excluded, we can better assess
the trend in recent years. There has in fact been an increase in the
number of one sided deaths in the past decade, but these deaths
are only a small percentage of total violent deaths and are
eclipsed by deaths from terrorism, battle deaths and homicide.

Violent deaths do not always occur in formal conflicts, but can


also result from one-sided violence between groups within a
nation. An instance of one-sided violence is defined here as the
use of force by a government or other formally organized group
against citizens, resulting in at least 25 deaths in any year.

The number of attempted genocides and politicides has also been


declining since the end of the Second World War. A politicide is
defined here as the mass murder of civilians for their support of a
political movement. Figure 2.15 shows a count of the number of
genocides and politicides per year from 1956 to 2014, classified
according to the magnitude of deaths that occurred.

Trying to assess a trend in one-sided violence can be difficult, as


such datasets tend to be dominated by single events that lead to
tens if not hundreds of thousands of deaths. Figure 2.14 depicts
one-sided deaths per year from 1989 to 2014, with the left hand

FIGURE 2.12 TOTAL ARMED CONFLICTS BY TYPE, 1946-2014


The last decade has seen a growth in the number of internationalised internal conflicts.

NUMBER OF ARMED CONFLICTS

60

Internationalised internal

Internationalised
internal conflicts
made up 3% of total
conflicts in 1991, but
32.5% in 2014.

Internal

50

Interstate
Extrasystemic

40

30

20

10

0
1946

1956

1966

1976

1986

1996

2006

Source: UCDP/PRIO Armed Conflict Dataset (v4)

FIGURE 2.13 TOTAL NUMBER OF BATTLE DEATHS, 1946 - 2014 AND 1989 - 2014
The number of battle deaths reached a 25 year high in 2014, the majority of which occurred as a result of the conflict in Syria.
However, the number is still well below the number of deaths recorded in the mid-1960s and mid-1980s.

TOTAL BATTLE DEATHS

600,000

65 YEAR TREND

120,000

500,000

100,000

400,000

80,000

300,000

60,000

200,000

40,000

UCDP

100,000

PRIO

0
1946

25 YEAR TREND

20,000

0
1956

1966

1976

1986

1996

2006

1989

1994

1999

2004

2009

2014

Source: UCDP, PRIO

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Trends in Peace

35

Both the number and severity of these types of one-sided


violence have been declining. There have been six instances of
the most severe category of genocidal violence since 1956: in
Indonesia, Nigeria, Pakistan, Cambodia, Sudan and most
recently Rwanda. However, since 1994 there have been no
attempted genocides and politicides that resulted in more than
256,000 deaths and the total count of genocides and politicides
has fallen from 11 in 1974 to just two in 2014.

One potential reason for the reduction in one-sided violence is


the increased commitment from the international community
to violence prevention. Figure 2.16 shows the number of actively
deployed, uniformed UN peacekeepers from 1991 to 2016.
There has been a large increase in the number of deployed
peacekeepers since the turn of the century, with over 100,000
active as of early 2016.

FIGURE 2.14 DEATHS FROM ONE-SIDED VIOLENCE, 1989-2014, INCLUDING AND EXCLUDING THE RWANDAN GENOCIDE
There has been an increase in the number of one-sided violent deaths in the last decade, but there hasnt been a high magnitude
genocide since Rwanda in 1994.

INCLUDING RWANDA

500,000

400,000

300,000

200,000

100,000

0
1989

1994

1999

2004

2009

45,000

TOTAL ONE SIDED CONFLICT DEATHS

TOTAL ONE SIDED CONFLICT DEATHS

600,000

EXCLUDING RWANDA

40,000
35,000
30,000
25,000
20,000
15,000
10,000
5,000
0
1989

2014

1994

1999

2004

2009

2014

Source: UCDP/PRIO One-Sided Conflict

FIGURE 2.15 TOTAL NUMBER OF GENOCIDES AND POLITICIDES, 1956 - 2014


There have been six episodes of genocidal violence since 1956 that resulted in more than 256,000 deaths.

COUNT OF POLITICIDES AND GENOCIDES

12

More than 256,000 Deaths


64,000 - 256,000

10

16,000 - 64,000
4,000 - 16,000

1,000 - 4,000
0 - 1,000

Source: Political Instability Task Force, State Failure Problem Set

36

1991

1996

and
a

1986

Rw

1981

Sud
an

bod
ia

1976

Cam

Pak
is

tan

1971

eria

1966

N ig

1961

Indo
nes
ia

1956

2001

2006

2011

While peace entails more than the absence of war, the majority
of violent deaths in the last decade has occurred in conflict or
warlike situations.

MILITARISATION

The increasing number of deployed peacekeepers and the


international communitys improvement in meeting their UN
peacekeeping funding dues reached record highs in early 2016,
suggesting that the international community is more willing
and able to address war and conflict situations than in the
immediate period after the Second World War. However, an
increase in the resources devoted to violence containment
should not be equated with a more peaceful world. The
potential for future violent conflict still exists, as attested to by
the recent increase in the number of conflicts.

While data availability for militarisation does not extend back to


1950 for all indicators, there is enough data to suggest that both
global military expenditure and the number of active duty military
personnel have increased since the end of the Second World War,
although this has begun to change over the past 20 years.
Harmonized total global military expenditure data is currently
only available back to 1990, although it is available back to 1955
for NATO member nations. The total level of NATO military
spending (excluding the US) increased from approximately US
$150 billion in 1955 to $268 billion in 2015, an increase of 78
per cent. US expenditure increased by 67 per cent over the same
period. However, there was a sharp decline in total spending by
NATO countries in the last decade, both including and
excluding the US. Total military expenditure has decreased
every year since 2009.

The nature of conflicts that are arising is also changing. While


the prospect of direct interstate conflict seems to be becoming
much more likely, the potential for indirect or proxy conflict
between nation states is rising. This can be seen in the current
conflict in Syria, where the conflict between the Assad regime
and multiple non-state actors has spilled over into a broader
proxy conflict between Saudi Arabia and Iran and more recently
the United States and Russia. Tensions between external
nations threatened to erupt into a much broader conflict when
Turkey shot down a Russian attack aircraft that had allegedly
strayed into Turkish airspace.

The end of the Cold War saw a massive reduction in military


expenditure, from US$1.5 trillion in 1990, down to $1 trillion in
1996. However, this decline proved to be short lived, with year
on year increases from 1996 to 2009 and a plateau in total
military spending since then.
In contrast to the increase in military spending, the total number
of armed service personnel has been decreasing in the last 20
years. Comparable data is available for the period 1995 to 2014. It
shows that the global number of armed service personnel has
fallen from 30.1 million in 1995 to 27.3 million in 2014. Of the
worlds 50 largest militaries, 26 saw reductions in the total
number of armed services personnel, including four of the ten
largest standing armies: China, the US, Russia and South Korea.

One potential reason for the


reduction in one-sided violence is
the increased commitment from
the international community to
violence prevention.

FIGURE 2.16 UN DEPLOYED PEACEKEEPERS BY TYPE, 1990-2016 (MONTHLY)


Peacekeeping deployments reached their highest ever levels in 2016.

TOTAL DEPLOYED UN PEACEKEEPERS

Troops
Police

120,000

Observers
100,000

80,000

60,000

40,000

20,000

20
14

20
12

0
20
1

20
08

6
20
0

20
04

2
20
0

0
20
0

19
98

19
96

19
94

19
92

19
90

Source: IPI Peacekeeping Database

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Trends in Peace

37

Figure 2.18 highlights the contrast


between military expenditure as a
percentage of GDP and declining armed
forces personnel, both as a global total
and for the worlds four largest militaries
(excluding North Korea).
After increasing the size of its armed forces
in response to conflicts in Iraq and
Afghanistan, the US army continued its
long downward trend in size. Total
spending rose by over $200 billion,
although as a percentage of GDP it has
returned to the same level as in 1995. The
trend in China was very similar, with an
even more pronounced increase in
spending, up nearly 600 per cent from
1995, although this occurred in tandem
with an unprecedented period of economic
growth. Russia also decreased its number
of armed forces personnel, from 1.8 million
down to 1.4. Of the four highlighted
countries, only India increased its number
of personnel, from 2.15 to 2.72 million, a
27 per cent increase.

FIGURE 2.17 TOTAL MILITARY EXPENDITURE IN 2014 USD, 1955-2015

TOTAL MILITARY SPENDING (2014 USD) TRILLIONS

Total global military expenditure has increased considerably since 1995, but levelled
off over the last decade.
2
1.8

Global Total

1.6
1.4
1.2
1

NATO

0.8
0.6
0.4

NATO
(excluding US)

0.2
0
1955

1960

1965

1970

1975

1980

1985

1990

1995 2000 2005

2010

The reduction in the number of personnel


reflects the decreased likelihood of conflicts

2015

Source: SIPRI

FIGURE 2.18 MILITARY EXPENDITURE AS A % OF GDP AND TOTAL ARMED SERVICES PERSONNEL, 1995-2012

2.00
1.50

1.5%

1.00
0.50

1.0%

1995

2000

2005

2010

Milex (% GDP)

RUSSIA

5.0%

2.40

4.5%

2.20
2.00

4.0%

1.80

3.5%

1.60

3.0%

1.40

2.5%
2.0%

0.00

1.20
1995

2000

2005

2010

1.00

Armed Services
Personnel

2.00
1.90

4.5%

1.80

4.0%

1.70

3.5%

1.60

3.0%

1.50

2.5%

1.40
1.30

2.0%

1.20

1.5%
1.0%

1.10
1995

2000

2005

2010

INDIA

5.0%

1.00

3.50

4.5%
3.00

4.0%
3.5%

2.50

3.0%
2.00

2.5%
2.0%

1.50

1.5%
1.0%

1995

2000

2005

2010

1.00

ARMED SERVICES PERSONNEL


(MILLIONS)

2.50

2.0%

US

5.0%

ARMED SERVICES PERSONNEL


(MILLIONS)

3.00

MILITARY EXPENDITURE (% OF GDP)

3.50

2.5%

MILITARY EXPENDITURE (% OF GDP)

4.00

Source: World Bank, SIPRI

38

4.50

ARMED SERVICES PERSONNEL


(MILLIONS)

CHINA

3.0%

ARMED SERVICES PERSONNEL


(MILLIONS)

MILITARY EXPENDITURE (% OF GDP)

MILITARY EXPENDITURE (% OF GDP)

In the worlds largest military powers, the number of armed forces personnel has been declining.

between states and thus the need for infantry. It might also, however,
reflect a shift away from labour-intensive armed forces to more
technologically advanced military programs with a primary
emphasis on border protection and surveillance. There is also the
possibility that the trend of increasing internal conflicts has been
mirrored by a trend in violence containment spending away from
armed forces and towards the increased militarisation of internal
security in the form of counter-terrorism, surveillance and expanded
police capacity and powers.

past half century. Of the 40 countries in the dataset, 25


experienced increases in their homicide rate from 1960 to 2010,
with decreases in 15 countries. Figure 2.19 shows the five
countries with the largest percentage improvements and
deteriorations in their homicide rate from 1960 to 2010.
Homicides rates in Europe reached historic lows in the 1950s
and although these rates are still amongst the lowest in the
world, they increased steadily in many European countries from
1960 until the mid-1990s.
One factor that is often ignored when looking at changes in societal
safety and security is the level of resources devoted to containing
violence. Comparable security sector spending is only available for
a handful of countries. Figure 2.20 highlights inflation adjusted
police and prison system spending in the US and UK from 1950 to
2014, as a percentage of total government revenue.

SOCIETAL SAFETY
AND SECURITY
The greatest challenge in assessing trends in societal safety and
security is finding comparable data sources. The GPI relies on
expert qualitative assessments to fill these data gaps, but such
assessments are not available over the longer term. As such,
making an assessment of trends in internal peace is much more
difficult before the first GPI in 2007.
Homicide is widely considered to be the most reliable and
broadly comparable type of interpersonal violence data.
Comparing other types of violent crime for even a single year is
exceedingly difficult, owing to differences in classification,
counting, collection and reporting procedures across different
countries. By contrast, homicide data is usually collected and
classified in a similar manner across countries and
underreporting is not an issue, although misclassification might
be. As such, finding a harmonized dataset of violent crime for
the last 60 years is not possible, but there is comparable
homicide data for 40 countries from 1960 to 2010.
While the dataset is not large enough to be conclusive about
global homicide trends, particularly as most of the countries are
from Europe with a small number of South American countries
and a single sub-Saharan African country, it is indicative of how
homicide rates have changed in the developed world over the

In both countries the percentage of government revenue that is


spent on protection services, such as the police and the prison
system, has increased significantly, but has been decreasing over
the last five years. Although comparable data on protection
spending is not available for other countries, data on police
numbers does indicate that more countries increased their
police officers rate in the last thirty years than decreased. IEP
has data that covers 101 countries of which 76 increased their
police numbers while 26 decreased between 1981 and 2012.
Figure 2.21 depicts an index chart of violent crime,
incarceration and protection spending in the US from 1978 to
2014. The drop in homicide and violent crime in the US has
been widely touted as an example of increasing peacefulness,
but there has been a concurrent increase in incarceration and
spending on police.
This increased level of spending on protection services has been
paralleled by the large increase on counter-terrorism spending
and domestic surveillance in the wake of the September 11th
2001 terrorist attacks.
Internal violence can also take the form of government abuse
of citizens. The GPI uses the Political Terror Scale as its
measure of state sponsored violence, which has data available

FIGURE 2.19 HOMICIDE INDEX CHART (1960 = 1), FIVE YEAR MOVING AVERAGE, 1960-2010
Of the 40 countries in the long term homicide dataset, only Singapore and Japan saw a fall in their homicide rate
of more than 50 per cent from 1960 to 2010
HOMICIDE INDEX (1960 = 1)_
FIVE YEAR MOVING AVERAGE

7
1.6

1.4

Austria
Switzerland
Germany

0.8
0.6
0.4

Singapore
Japan

0.2
0

Ireland

1.2

1960

1970

1980

1990

2000

Netherlands

Belgium

Norway
Spain

1
0

1960

1970

1980

1990

2000

Source: CLIO-INFRA

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Trends in Peace

39

FIGURE 2.20 POLICE AND PRISON SYSTEM SPENDING AS A PERCENTAGE OF


TOTAL GOVERNMENT REVENUE, US AND UK, 1950-2014
In both the US and UK, the percentage of government revenue spent on protection
services has more than doubled.

PERCENTAGE OF
TOTAL GOVERNMENT REVENUE

7%

US

6%
5%

UK

4%
3%
2%
1%
0%

1950

1955

1960

1965

1970

1975

1980

1985

1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

Source: Chantrill (2016), IEP Calculations

FIGURE 2.21 INDEX CHART OF VIOLENT CRIME, INCARCERATION AND POLICE


AND PRISON SYSTEM SPENDING IN THE US (1978=1)

back to 1976. Figure 2.22 shows the


composition of the Political Terror Scale
scores from 1976 to 2014.
The average country score improved
slightly, moving from 2.53 to 2.43,
although there was no change in the
median score. In 1976, 23.6 per cent of
countries received the best possible score
of one, a figure that improved slightly by
2014 to 25.3 per cent. Similarly, the
percentage of countries receiving the worst
possible score of five rose slightly from 3.9
per cent to 5.6 per cent. Even though other
long term indicators of political stability
and democratisation improved over the
same time period, there was virtually no
change in the likelihood of state violence
against citizens.

Although the violent crime rate in the US has declined, there has been a much larger
percentage increase in protection spending and incarceration.
4.500
4.000

Incarceration
rate

INDEX (1978 = 1)

3.500
3.000

Police and
prison spending

2.500
2.000
1.500
1.000

Violent crime
rate

0.500
0.000

1978

1983

1988

1993

1998

2003

2008

Source: FBI, IEP

FIGURE 2.22 POLITICAL TERROR SCALE, MEDIAN ROUNDED SCORE, 1976 TO 2014
The composition of the Political Terror Scale has not changed much since 1976.
0%

10%

Little to
no political
terror

PERCENTAGE OF COUNTRIES

20%

30%
40%

50%

60%
70%

80%

Very high
levels of
political
terror

90%
100%

1976

1981

Source: Political Terror Scale

40

1986

1991

1996

2001

2006

2011

The drop in homicide


and violent crime in
the US has been
widely touted as an
example of increasing
peacefulness, but
there has been a
concurrent increase
in incarceration and
spending on police.

GLOBAL
ECONOMIC
VALUE OF PEACE

$
$
$

$
$

GLOBAL ECONOMIC IMPACT OF VIOLENCE

WHICH IS EQUIVALENT TO

13.3

$13.6

WHICH IS EQUIVALENT TO

$5

PER PERSON GLOBALLY


PER DAY

WHY?

Internal security
spending

Losses from conflict

$742 billion

Military spending

Economic losses
from conflict

Total ODA, gross


disbursement

$15 billion
(2% of the cost
of conflict)

$2.5 trillion

$167 billion
(22% of the cost
of conflict)

Losses from crime and


interpersonal violence

$742 billion

$4.2 trillion

Peacekeeping and
peacebuilding

$6.2 trillion

IF THE WORLD DECREASED


VIOLENCE BY ONLY 10% ...

... $1.36

trillion

IN ANNUAL ECONOMIC RESOURCES


& ACTIVITY COULD BE GENERATED,
EQUIVALENT TO:

42

More than total


global foreign direct
investment in 2014
10x the total Official
Development
Assistance in 2014
The value of global
food exports in 2014

HIGHLIGHTS
The economic impact of violence to the global economy was $13.6 trillion
in 2015, in purchasing power parity (PPP) terms. This figure is equivalent to
approximately 11 times the size of global foreign direct investment, which
was $1.23 trillion in 2014.1
The global economic impact of violence was
$13.6 trillion PPP in 2015.
This figure is equivalent to 13.3 per cent of world
GDP or $1,876 PPP for every person in the world.
The global economic impact of violence
decreased by two per cent in 2015, which is
equivalent to $246 billion PPP.
The decrease has been driven mainly by declines
in homicide, internal security expenditures and
military spending in the industrialised countries.
The global economic impact of violence is
approximately 11 times the size of global foreign
direct investment, which was $1.23 trillion in
2014.
Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan incur the largest
economic impact as a percentage of their GDP at

The global per capita economic impact of


violence was $1,876 PPP. This is $5 per day, per
person or approximately three times the daily
poverty line of $1.90 PPP.
The direct cost of violence in 2015 is 30 times the
amount spent on official development assistance
(ODA) in 2014.
A ten per cent decrease in the economic impact
of violence would produce a peace dividend of
$1.36 trillion PPP. This dividend would be
equivalent to global food exports in 2014.2
The spending on peacebuilding and
peacekeeping is proportionally small compared
to the economic losses from armed conflict.
Peacebuilding and peacekeeping expenditures
represent two per cent of global losses from
armed conflict in 2015.

54, 54 and 45 per cent of GDP respectively.

IEP estimates of the economic impact of violence include direct


and indirect costs and a multiplier effect that measures the flow
on effect that would accrue were these expenditures allocated to
more productive areas of the economy.
Global military expenditures are the largest component, at
$6.16 trillion PPP. Global military expenditure has declined by
ten per cent in the last three years but it still remains
considerably higher than its level in 1960.3 The United States
and China have the highest expenditure on the military, with 38
and 10 per cent, respectively, of the global share.
Interpersonal violence, which includes homicides and violent and
sexual assaults, accounts for 17 per cent of the global economic
impact of violence and was $2.3 trillion PPP in 2015. The largest
cost associated with interpersonal violence is from homicide and
was calculated at $1.79 trillion PPP, equivalent to 13 per cent of the
total. Central America and the Caribbean is the region most
affected by homicides, followed by South America.

The global economic impact of armed conflict was $742 billion


PPP in 2015. The Middle East and North Africa is the region
most affected, resulting in a per person cost of conflict at $464
PPP. The economic impact of deaths from internal armed conflict
has increased four times from its 2007 level and now stands at
$133 billion PPP. In contrast, the losses from external battle
deaths have dropped by 70 per cent in the last nine years due to
the drawdown of coalition forces in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Despite the deterioration in global peacefulness, the global
economic impact of violence decreased by two per cent in 2015,
which is equivalent to $246 billion PPP. This decline has been
driven mainly by three changes in large industrialised countries:
the decline in homicide, domestic security expenditures and
military spending.

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Global Economic Value of Peace

43

METHODOLOGY

The global economic impact of violence is defined as the expenditure and


economic effect related to containing, preventing and dealing with the
consequences of violence. The estimates include the direct and indirect
cost of violence as well as an economic multiplier. The multiplier effect
calculates the additional economic activity that would have accrued if the
direct costs of violence had been avoided.
Expenditure on containing violence is economically efficient
when it effectively prevents violence for the least amount of
spending. However, spending beyond an optimal level has the
potential to constrain a nations economic growth. Therefore,
achieving the right levels of spending on expenditures such as
the military, judicial and security services is important for the
most productive use of capital.
This study includes two types of costs: direct and indirect costs.
Examples of direct costs include medical costs for victims of
violent crime, capital destruction from violent conflict and costs
associated with the security and judicial systems. Indirect costs
include lost wages or productivity from crime due to physical
and emotional trauma. There is also a measure of the impact of
fear on the economy, as people who fear that they may become a
victim of violent crime alter their behaviour.4

An important aspect of IEPs estimation is the international


comparability of the country estimates, thereby allowing cost/
benefit analysis of country interventions. The methodology uses
constant purchasing power parity (PPP) international dollars.
IEP estimates the economic impact of violence using a
comprehensive aggregation of costs related to violence, armed
conflict and spending on military and internal security services.
The GPI is the initial point of reference for developing the
estimates. The 2015 version of the economic impact of violence
includes 16 variables in three groups.

TABLE 3.1 VARIABLES INCLUDED IN THE ECONOMIC IMPACT OF VIOLENCE, 2015


SECURITY SERVICES AND PREVENTION
ORIENTED COSTS

ARMED CONFLICT-RELATED COSTS

INTERPERSONAL VIOLENCE

Military expenditure

Direct costs of deaths from internal violent


conflict

Homicides

Internal security expenditure

Direct costs of deaths from external violent


conflict

Violent assault

Private security

Indirect costs of violent conflict (GDP losses


due to conflict)

Sexual assault

UN peacekeeping

Losses from status as refugees and IDPs

Fear of crime

ODA peacebuilding expenditure

Small arms imports

Indirect costs of incarceration

Terrorism

44

BOX 3.1 THE MULTIPLIER EFFECT

The multiplier effect is a commonly used economic


concept, which describes the extent to which additional
expenditure improves the wider economy. Every time
there is an injection of new income into the economy
this will lead to more spending which will, in turn,
create employment, further income and additional
spending. This mutually reinforcing economic cycle is
known as the multiplier effect and is the reason that a
dollar of expenditure can create more than a dollar of
economic activity.

income of the victim. The economic benefits from


greater peace can therefore be significant. This was also
noted by Brauer and Tepper-Marlin (2009) who argued
that violence or the fear of violence may result in some
economic activities not occurring at all.5 More generally,
there is strong evidence to suggest that violence and the
fear of violence can fundamentally alter the incentives
for business. For instance, analysis of 730 business
ventures in Colombia from 1997 to 2001 found that with
higher levels of violence, new ventures were less likely to
survive and profit. Consequently, with greater levels of
violence it is likely that we might expect lower levels of
employment and economic productivity over the
long-term, as the incentives faced discourage new
employment creation and longer-term investment.6

Although the exact magnitude of this effect is difficult to


measure, it is likely to be particularly high in the case of
expenditure related to containing violence. For instance,
if a community were to become more peaceful,
individuals would spend less time and resources
protecting themselves against violence. Because of this
decrease in violence there are likely to be substantial
flow-on effects for the wider economy, as money is
diverted towards more productive areas such as health,
business investment, education and infrastructure.

This study assumes that the multiplier is one, signifying


that for every dollar saved on violence containment,
there will be an additional dollar of economic activity.
This is a relatively conservative multiplier and broadly in
line with similar studies.7

When a homicide is avoided, the direct costs, such as the


money spent on medical treatment and a funeral, could
be spent elsewhere. The economy also benefits from the
lifetime

The analysis presents conservative estimates of the global


economic impact of violence. The estimation only includes
variables of violence for which reliable data could be obtained.
The following elements are examples of some of the items not
counted in the economic impact of violence:

The total economic impact of violence includes the following


components:
zz

perpetrator, and the government. These include direct


expenditures, such as the cost of policing.

zz Domestic violence
zz Violence against children and the elderly

zz

physiological trauma to the victim and lost

zz The cost of crime to business

zz Intimate partner violence

Indirect costs accrue after the violent event and


include indirect economic losses, physical and

zz Household out-of-pocket spending on safety and security

zz Spill over effects from conflict and violence

Direct costs are the cost of violence to the victim, the

productivity.
zz

The multiplier effect represents the flow-on effects of


direct costs, such as additional economic benefits

zz Self-directed violence

that would come from investment in business

zz The cost of intelligence agencies

development or education instead of containing or

zz Judicial system expenditures

dealing with violence. Box 3.1 provides a detailed


explanation of the peace multiplier used.
The term cost of violence containment is used to explain the
combined effect of direct and indirect costs. When a country
avoids the economic impact of violence, it realises a peace
dividend.

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Global Economic Value of Peace

45

ECONOMIC IMPACT OF VIOLENCE

RESULTS

Whilst the world experienced a slight increase in violence last year, the
economic impact of violence moved in the opposite direction and
decreased by two per cent. The deterioration in global peacefulness was
largely attributable to increases in terrorism, higher levels of conflict in the
Middle East and North Africa and increases in the number of refugees and
internally displaced people.
Meanwhile, the decrease in the overall economic impact of
violence has largely been driven by the decrease in the economic
impact of homicides, internal security and military spending in
the advanced western economies. The economic impact of
homicide accounted for the majority of the reduction, decreasing
by $134 billion PPP or seven per cent from 2014 to 2015. Internal
security expenditure, which captures incarceration and police
expenses, accounted for the remaining amount, declining globally
by three per cent or $118 billion PPP in 2015.
The driver of the reduction in the economic impact of internal
security spending was reduced spending in Russia and
Kazakhstan but also regionally in Eurasia and Europe. Russia
has seen very significant declines in internal security spending
due to the plan to cut the Interior Ministrys budget by more
than 10 per cent in 2015.8 The cuts are directly related to the
countrys economic recession.
The single largest item was global military expenditure, which
reached $6.16 trillion PPP, or 45 per cent of the economic
impact of violence in 2015. According to IEP data, global
military expenditure decreased slightly in 2015, by one per cent
or $67 billion PPP.9 The decline was driven by continued cuts to
US military expenditure, which decreased by 21 per cent from
its peak in 2010.10
Due to the greater size of per capita income in the advanced
economies, changes in underlying measures have a greater
impact on the global model. Violence containment spending
does not always follow the global trends of peacefulness, as
there are some categories of expenditure which are more
expensive than others.

46

Regionally, military expenditure showed some countervailing


trends, decreasing the most in Europe followed by South
America, North America and sub-Saharan Africa. In contrast,
military expenditure increased in Asia-Pacific and South Asia in
2015. The increasing military spending in Asia-Pacific is
primarily driven by Chinas military build-up, which saw the
military budget rise by approximately ten per cent in 2015.

The global economic impact of


violence was $13.6 trillion in 2015,
or 13.3% of world GDP.
In the case of the US, military-related expenditures such as the
significant spending on Veterans Affairs, the maintenance of the
nuclear arsenal and interest payments on military-related debt
are also included in the accounting. Due to the size of these
expenditures, at $848 billion, and the significance of the US
military, it is shown as a separate line item. The US is the only
country where these expenditures have been accounted for due
primarily to their size and transparent accounts.
There are large regional disparities in military spending. North
America and MENA have the highest levels of military
expenditure per capita, when calculated on the same basis,
while South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa have the lowest levels
in per capita terms.
The second largest contributor to the economic impact of
violence in 2015 was internal security, which accounted for 26
per cent of the total. Internal security expenditure includes
spending on the police and prison systems as well as the indirect
costs associated with incarceration. The data for internal
security spending is obtained from the OECD and the IMF.11

FIGURE 3.1 BREAKDOWN OF THE ECONOMIC IMPACT


OF VIOLENCE, 2015

TABLE 3.2 ECONOMIC IMPACT OF VIOLENCE 2015,


BILLIONS PPP
CATEGORY

IMPACT
OF DIRECT
COST WITH
MULTIPLIER

IMPACT OF
INDIRECT
COST

Internal security expenditure

3,434.6

98.6

3,533.2

Deaths from external conflict

1.0

1.0

Fear

119.5

119.5

GDP losses due to conflict

317.4

317.4

Homicide

309.9

1,482.7

1,792.6

Deaths from internal conflict

133.1

133.1

4,461.8

4,461.8

US Military related expenditure

1,696.4

1,696.4

Peacebuilding and peacekeeping


expenditure

45.5

45.5

Private security spending

672.8

672.8

Refugees and IDPs

5.5

169.0

174.5

Sexual and violent assault

85.2

459.5

544.6

Small arms

8.3

8.3

Terrorism

19.6

93.9

113.5

TOTAL

10,873.6

2,740.6

13,614.2

Military expenditure
12

Over 70 per cent of the economic impact of violence


accrues from spending on military and internal security.

TOTAL

Military
expenditure 45%
Internal
security 26%

Homicide
13%
Other 4%
Conflict 3%
Private security
5%

Sexual and violent


assault 4%

Source: IEP

Source: IEP

Homicides, at 13 per cent, was the third largest category. The


economic impact of homicide in 2015 was approximately $1.79
trillion PPP. Economic costs arising from intentional homicides
are greater than the costs of any other category of crime or
conflict. The model accounts for the costs related to the victim
and perpetrators of crime. The indirect costs of homicide are
extremely high, as victims of homicide can have no positive
influence on productivity, unlike other crimes where the victim
may be able to contribute to the economy after recovery;
therefore their lifetime earnings are a loss to the economy.
Reflecting this, the economic impact of violent and sexual
assault was three times less than the impact of homicide. In
2015 violent and sexual crimes accounted for $545 billion PPP
or four per cent of the global economic impact of violence.

Direct costs of homicide and violent crime include medical


costs, lost earnings and damages to the victim and the
perpetrator. Indirect costs include the lost productivity of the
victim, family and friends due to psychological trauma. High
levels of crime impose social costs through increased
government spending on public health, the criminal justice
system and policing. Crime also reduces economic activity and
consumption and adversely affects the business climate.13
The economic impact of external and internal conflict was $452
billion PPP and represents three per cent of the total. This figure
is highly conservative, as IEP estimates of the economic impact of
violent conflict only include in-country effects and do not provide
estimates for the negative flow-on effects to other economies.

FIGURE 3.2 COMPOSITION OF GLOBAL VIOLENCE CONTAINMENT, 2015


The majority of expenditure for violence containment is for the military and internal security.
Small arms
Fear

Homicides

Deaths from internal conflict


Peacebuilding

UN Peacekeeping

Refugees
and IDPs

CRIME AND INTERPERSONAL VIOLENCE


Violent and sexual crimes

CONFLICT
GDP losses

is
ror
Ter

Private
security services

Police and prison

Military expenditure

INTERNAL SECURITY
MILITARY

Source: IEP

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Global Economic Value of Peace

47

Despite the deterioration in global peace from 2014 to 2015, the


global economic impact of violence in fact decreased by two per
cent, or $246 billion PPP, in 2015. This decline has been driven
mainly by three changes in large industrialised countries: the
decline in economic impact from homicide, domestic security
expenditures and military spending.
Table 3.3 sets out the year-on-year change in the economic
impact of violence, showing the categories by improvement in
descending order. The category that improved the most was
homicides, which declined by seven per cent or $134 billion
PPP. The economic impact of the second largest category,
internal security expenditure, also improved three per cent,
which was equivalent to $117 billion PPP.
The economic impact of deaths from internal conflict increased
by 15 per cent or $17 billion PPP, reflecting the increased
intensity of armed conflicts in the MENA region and
Afghanistan. In contrast, the economic impact of deaths from
external conflict has decreased by 70 per cent from its 2007
level but increased slightly in 2015, by $300 million PPP.

TABLE 3.3 CHANGES IN THE ECONOMIC IMPACT OF


VIOLENCE FROM 20142015
CATEGORY

ECONOMIC
IMPACT 2014
(BILLIONS)

ECONOMIC
IMPACT 2015
(BILLIONS)

CHANGE
(BILLIONS)

Homicide

1,926.2

1,792.6

-133.6

-7%

Internal
security
expenditure

3,651.0

3,533.2

-117.8

-3%

Military
expenditure

4,529.1

4,461.8

-67.3

-1%

Refugees and
IDPs

188.9

174.5

-14.4

-8%

Terrorism

126.8

113.5

-13.3

-10%

Fear

127.5

119.5

-7.9

-6%

Sexual and
violent assault

547.7

544.6

-3.1

-1%

Deaths from
external
conflict

0.7

1.0

0.3

44%

Private
security
spending

671.8

672.8

0%

Peacekeeping
and
peacebuilding
spending

42.8

45.5

2.7

6%

GDP losses
due to conflict

304.8

317.4

12.6

4%

Deaths from
internal
conflict

115.7

133.1

17.4

15%

US military
related
expenditure

1,619.3

1,696.4

77.1

5%

Small arms

8.3

8.3

0%

Total

13,860.6

13,614.2

-246.4

-2.0%

2014-2015

Source: IEP

48

CHANGE (%)

2014-2015

Armed conflict also has economic flow-on effects that spill over
into neighbouring countries. During the period from 2012 to
2014, Lebanese real GDP growth was reduced by 2.9 per cent per
annum due to the Syrian civil war. The total fiscal cost of the
Syrian civil war to Lebanon is over US$5 billion and includes the
costs associated with accommodating high levels of refugees.14
This is an example of figures that are not included in the model.
The indirect cost of conflict comprises the lost productivity
resulting from the diversion of public and private capital from
productive activities to conflict-related activities. Additionally, it
also captures the destruction of capital due to violent conflict.15
The GDP losses due to conflict increased by four per cent in
2015 and now stands at $317 billion PPP.
The economic impact of the fear of crime or insecurity in 2015
was $120 billion PPP. The economic impact of fear includes
indirect costs arising from the anticipation of possible
victimisation. These costs include changes in the behaviour of
individuals and businesses, such as reductions in consumption
and production, decreased number of business transactions and
lower level of trust in society. The economic impact of the fear of
crime decreased by six per cent in 2015.
Although deaths from terrorism have increased by nine times
since 2000, this category only accounts for one per cent of the
total economic impact of violence. The model includes deaths
and injuries resulting from terrorist incidents, including
indirect costs, but does not include property damage. In 2015
the economic impact of terrorism was $113 billion PPP. There
has also been an increase in expenditure on counterterrorism.
European countries, for example, increased counterterrorism
expenditure over 16 times in eight years, from 5.7 million in
2002 to 93.5 million in 2009 and is captured in the study
under the internal security category.16
The economic impact of population displacement, measured as
the number of refugees and IDPs, was $175 billion PPP or one
per cent of the economic impact of violence in 2015. This is an
increase of nearly eight times from 2007, largely due to the
increase in refugees fleeing the Syrian civil war. Direct refugee
and internal displacement costs were $12 billion in 2007 and
increased to $90.7 billion in 2015.
Changes in violence containment expenditure over the last
decade generally reflect trends in peace. The shift away from
armed conflicts between states has meant that fewer countries
are impacted by the economic costs of conflict. However, those
countries that are currently affected by violent conflict are very
heavily impacted. For example, in Syria it is estimated that the
civil war has cost 54 per cent of GDP.
A higher level of peacefulness in a country reduces the economic
impact of violence; the least peaceful countries have a higher
economic impact relative to the size of their economies than
more peaceful countries.
Figure 3.3 shows that there is a significant difference in the
economic impact of violence as a percentage of GDP between
less and more peaceful countries. The correlation between
overall GPI score and the economic impact of violence as a
percentage of GDP in 2015 is r=0.7.

ECONOMIC IMPACT OF VIOLENCE


CONTAINMENT AS PERCENTAGE OF GDP

20%
10%
0%

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

3.0

3.5

GPI

More peaceful

4.0

Less peaceful

Source: IEP

FIGURE 3.4 REGIONAL ECONOMIC IMPACT OF VIOLENCE BY SPENDING TYPE, 2015


The combined impact of the military and internal security accounts for the highest
category of spending in all regions aside from Central America and the Caribbean and
South America.
100%
90%

6%
16%

11%
6%

80%

18%
1%

70%

33%

60%

1%
43%
55%

56%

38%

2%

22%

0.2%

2%

32%

78%

25%

30%

50%

20%

38%

North
America

MENA

Violent crime

27%

48%
37%

28%

10%
0%

57%

13%

34%

50%
40%

16%

24%

28%

2%

Asia-Pacific South Asia Russia and


Eurasia

Internal security

23%

20%

14%

Europe sub-Saharan South


Africa
America

Armed conflict

Military

Central
America
and the
Caribbean

Source: IEP

FIGURE 3.5 TEN COUNTRIES WITH HIGHEST ECONOMIC IMPACT OF VIOLENCE


AS PERCENTAGE OF GDP
Conflict and organised crime are the major drivers that create a high economic
impact from violence in these countries.
60%

50%

40%

30%

20%

10%

Le
so
th
o

ol
om
bi
a
en
tr a
lA
Re fr
pu ica
bl n
ic
N
or
th
Ko
re
a

on
du
ra
H

Su
da

So
ut
h

Ve
ne
zu
ela

0%

Of the ten countries where violence


containment expenditure is proportionally
the largest, five are experiencing armed
conflict. These are Syria, Iraq,
Afghanistan, South Sudan and the Central
African Republic. The other countries
have very high levels of interpersonal
violence, with the exception of North
Korea which is a highly militarised
country. Figure 3.5 highlights the ten
countries whose economic impact of
violence relative to the size of their
economy is the highest in the world.

30%

Af
gh
an
ist
an

The economic impact of violence for the


ten most affected countries accounts for
more than 25 per cent of their GDP. They
either have high levels of internal conflict
or high levels of interpersonal violence.
Syria has the highest proportion of its
GDP related to violence containment
expenditure at 54 per cent.

40%

Ir a

THE GREATEST ECONOMIC IMPACT

r = 0.7
50%

r ia

COUNTRIES WHERE VIOLENCE HAS

60%

Sy

In contrast, Central America and the


Caribbean has the highest proportion of
expenditure related to interpersonal
violence, at 56 per cent. This region has
very high levels of interpersonal violence
and accordingly incurs high costs from
intentional homicides, violent and sexual
assault and the fear of crime. For example,
the economic impact of homicide in
Venezuela and Honduras is the equivalent
of 36 and 30 per cent of GDP respectively.
South Asia and MENA are the worst
affected regions for armed conflict.

PROPORTION OF PER CAPITA ECONOMIC


IMPACT BY REGION, 2015

The economic impact by type of


expenditure is not evenly distributed across
regions, with large variations in both the
magnitude of expenditure and its
composition. Figure 3.4 illustrates the
proportion by category for each region. The
highest proportion of military expenditure
was in North America, where it accounts
for 78 per cent of the total economic
impact. Europe proportionally spends the
most on internal and private security, with
this category making up 56 per cent of the
economic impact of violence.

FIGURE 3.3 ECONOMIC IMPACT OF VIOLENCE CONTAINMENT AS PROPORTION OF


GDP COMPARED TO LEVELS OF PEACE IN 2015
The economic impact of violence containment is higher in less peaceful countries.

ECONOMIC IMPACT OF VIOLENCE AS


PERCENTAGE OF GDP, 2015

REGIONAL ANALYSIS

Source: IEP

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Global Economic Value of Peace

49

PEACEBUILDING & PEACEKEEPING SPENDING


COMPARED TO THE COST OF CONFLICT
Peacebuilding and peacekeeping operations are extremely
important in preventing and dealing with violent conflict.
Peacekeeping operations are measures aimed at responding to a
conflict, whereas peacebuilding expenditures are aimed at
developing and maintaining the capacities for resilience to
conflict. Thus peacebuilding seeks to enable a country to sustain
and develop peace over the long term.
This is done through building the core functions of
government, ensuring basic levels of safety and security and
increasing the internal capacity for dispute resolution by
supporting inclusive political process, among other measures.
Therefore, peacebuilding is more targeted than peacekeeping
in creating the attitudes, institutions and structures that create
and sustain peace in a conflict-affected country.
Peacebuilding expenditure aims to reduce the risk of lapsing or
relapsing into violent conflict by strengthening national
capacities and institutions for conflict management and laying
the foundations of sustainable peace and development. These
activities are distinct from peacekeeping activity, which is broadly
aimed at responding to a conflict and establishing security.
Peacebuilding and peacekeeping related activities in conflictaffected countries are a small proportion of ODA. In 2013,
peacebuilding and peacekeeping investments of $US6.8 and
$US8.3 billion in were equivalent to nine per cent of total ODA,
$US167 in that year.
Fragile and conflict-affected countries are in greater need of
investment in peacebuilding to ensure they do not fall back into
conflict. To ascertain the current level of aid spent on peacebuilding
activities in conflict-affected countries, IEP undertook an
assessment of the yearly expenditures that go into peacebuilding.
The analysis is conducted using donor expenditures as measured
by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development
(OECD) Development Assistance
Committee (DAC) Creditor Reporting
System (CRS). More details on the
categories of expenditure included are
provided in Box 3.2.

The following 17 categories based on three peacebuilding


priority areas, identified as peacebuilding expenditure by the
2009 Report of the Secretary-General on Peacebuilding in the
immediate aftermath of conflict (A/63/881 S/2009/304),
were taken into consideration.
Priority area 1: Basic safety and security
zz Security system management and reform
zz Reintegration and small arms and light weapons (SALW)
control
zz Removal of land mines and explosive remnants of war
zz Child soldiers (prevention and demobilisation)
zz Participation in international peacekeeping operations
Priority area 2: Inclusive political processes
zz Legal and judicial development
zz Legislatures and political parties
zz Anti-corruption organisations and institutions
zz Democratic participation and civil society
zz Media and free flow of information
zz Human rights
zz Womens equality organisations and institutions
zz Civilian peacebuilding, conflict prevention and resolution
Priority area 3: Core Government Functions
zz Public sector policy and administrative management
zz Public finance management
zz Decentralisation and support to subnational government
Other
zz Specific peace-related expenditures

FIGURE 3.6 COST OF CONFLICT COMPARED TO OFFICIAL DEVELOPMENT


ASSISTANCE, UN PEACEKEEPING AND PEACEBUILDING SPENDING
Peacebuilding expenditure is proportionally small compared to the economic losses
from conflict.
$742
700

GLOBAL VALUE IN 2015 (BILLIONS)

Figure 3.6 highlights that the spending on


peacebuilding and peacekeeping is small
compared to the economic losses caused by
conflict, representing 0.9 per cent 1.1 per
cent respectively in 2015.

BOX 3.2 CATEGORIES OF PEACEBUILDING EXPENDITURE

600
500
400

22% of the cost


of conflict

300

$167

200
100

$8.27

0
Economic losses from
conflict, 2015

Source: IEP

50

1.1% of the cost


of conflict

Total ODA, gross


disbursement, 2013

Total Peacekeeping,
2013

0.9% of the cost


of conflict

$6.8
Peacebuilding to 31
conflict-affected
countries, 2013

POSITIVE PEACE
& SYSTEMS THINKING

WHAT IS POSITIVE PEACE?


NEGATIVE PEACE

... is the absence of violence


or fear of violence

POSITIVE PEACE

... is the attitudes, institutions


and structures which create and
sustain peaceful societies.

POSITIVE PEACE FACTORS

IEPs framework for Positive


Peace is based on eight
factors. The Positive Peace
factors not only sustain
peace but also support an
environment where human
potential flourishes. They
interact in complex ways,
are multidimensional and
are generally slow moving.
THE PILLARS OF PEACE

Positive Peace is defined as the attitudes, institutions and


structures which create and sustain peaceful societies. These
same factors also lead to many other positive outcomes which
society feels are important. Therefore Positive Peace is
described as creating the optimum environment for human
potential to flourish.

Sound business
environment

Good relations
with neighbours

High levels of
human capital

Acceptance of the
rights of others

Low levels
of corruption

Well functioning
government

Free flow of
information

Equitable
distribution
of resources

Positive Peace has been empirically derived by IEP via the


statistical analysis of thousands of cross-country measures of
economic and social progress to determine what factors are
statistically significantly associated with Negative Peace.

Positive Peace is measured by the Positive Peace Index (PPI)


which consists of eight domains, each containing three
indicators, totalling 24. This provides a baseline measure of the
effectiveness of a countrys institutions and attitudes to build
and maintain peace. It also provides a measure for
policymakers, researchers and corporations to use for
monitoring and evaluation efforts.

Positive Peace factors can be used as the basis for empirically


measuring a countrys resilience, or ability to absorb and recover
from shocks. It can also be used to measure fragility and to help
predict the likelihood of conflict, violence and instability.

There is a close relationship between Positive Peace and


violence as measured by Negative Peace.

52

WHY POSITIVE PEACE


IS TRANSFORMATIONAL
Humanity is now facing challenges unparalleled in its

In addition to the absence of violence, Positive Peace is

history. The most urgent of these, such as climate

also associated with many other social characteristics

change, decreasing biodiversity, increasing migration

that are considered desirable, including better economic

and over-population, are global in nature. These issues

outcomes, measures of wellbeing, levels of gender

call for international cooperation on an unprecedented

equality and environmental performance. In this way,

scale. Furthermore, the sources of these challenges are

Positive Peace can be thought of as creating an optimal

multidimensional, increasingly complex and span

environment in which human potential can flourish.

national borders. For these reasons, finding solutions


requires fundamentally new thinking.

Understanding what creates sustainable

Peace is an essential prerequisite in working to resolve

peace cannot be found in the study of

these challenges. Without peace, it will not be possible


to achieve the levels of trust, cooperation or

violence alone.
A parallel can be drawn with medical science. The study

inclusiveness necessary to solve these challenges, let

of pathology has led to numerous breakthroughs in our

alone empower the international institutions and

understanding of how to treat and cure disease.

organisations required to help address them.

However, it was only when medical science turned its

Without an understanding of the factors that support

focus to the study of healthy human beings that we

peace, it is impossible to determine the policies that

understood what we needed to do to stay healthy: the

work, the programmes that need to be implemented,

correct physical exercise, a good mental disposition and

and when, how, and where to introduce them.

a balanced diet, are some examples. This could only be

Practically identifying what resources are required is

learned by studying what was working. In the same way,

complex and calls for a shift towards new ways of

the study of conflict is different than the study of peace.

thinking about peace.

Seen in this light, Positive Peace can be used as an

Positive Peace provides a framework to understand and

overarching framework for understanding and achieving

then address the multiple and complex challenges the

progress not only in levels of global peacefulness, but in

world faces. Positive Peace is transformational in that it

the many other interrelated areas, such as those of

is a cross-cutting facilitator for improving progress,

economic and social advancement.

making it easier for businesses to sell, entrepreneurs


and scientists to innovate, individuals to produce, and
governments to effectively regulate.

Business competitiveness & entrepreneurialism


Foundations of wellbeing
Gender equality

POSITIVE
PEACE

Progress in a range of Millennium Development Goals


Youth development
Reported levels of happiness
Social cohesion & capital

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Positive Peace & Systems Thinking

53

INTRODUCTION
This section of the 2016 GPI report provides a description of complex
systems thinking in relation to Positive Peace and the nation state and
presents new research on the link between Positive Peace, which
represents the attitudes, institutions and structures which sustain peace,
and broader societal resilience.
This section introduces systems thinking as it has developed in
biology and ecology, then applies it to the nation state. Doing so
offers a new and innovative way in which to view a host of old
problems.
The section also builds upon these concepts in its discussion on
the resilience of nation states. Resilience is commonly understood
to relate to two main properties: a countrys ability to absorb and
recover from shocks, and its ability to adapt, evolve and improve
in challenging circumstances.

Countries with high levels of Positive Peace, for example, suffer


fewer effects from natural disasters, including 13 times fewer
fatalities compared to low Positive Peace countries.
Furthermore, Positive Peace levels relate to a countrys reaction
to different systemic shocks. While high Positive Peace countries
are subject to more economic shocks, major internal shocks
such as violent political change, violent conflict, and genocide,
typically occur in low Positive Peace countries. Trends in the
GPI also show that high Positive Peace is a significant
determinant of long term improvements in peace.

Through empirical analysis, it is shown that Positive Peace


offers a framework by which to explore these properties.

KEY FINDINGS

zz

High Positive Peace countries are more likely

zz

to maintain stability, adapt and recover from

Eighty-four per cent of major political shocks


occurred in low Positive Peace countries.

shocks as they overcome challenges.


zz
zz

Numbers of lives lost from natural disasters

Countries that are high in Positive peace are

between 2005 and 2015 were 13 times larger in

more likely to maintain high levels of peace.

low Positive Peace countries than in high


Positive Peace countries, a disproportionately

zz

Twice as many high Positive Peace countries


improved in peace between 2008 and 2016
when compared to countries with low
Positive Peace.

54

high ratio when compared to the distribution of


incidents.

UNDERSTANDING POSITIVE PEACE


The analysis in this report is based on two simple but useful
definitions of peace, each of which has a long history in peace
studies Negative Peace and Positive Peace. These two
commonly referenced definitions of peace were categorised by
one of the founders of modern peace studies, Johan Galtung.
According to his view, Negative Peace is the absence of violence
or fear of violence an intuitive definition that many agree with
and one which enables peace to be measured more easily.
Measures of Negative Peace are used to construct the GPI.
A more ambitious conceptualisation of peace is Positive Peace.
Well-developed Positive Peace represents the capacity for a
society to meet the needs of its citizens, reduce the number of
grievances that arise and resolve remaining disagreements
without the use of violence. IEP defines Positive Peace as the
attitudes, institutions and structures that create and sustain
peaceful societies.
BOX 4.1 KEY TERMS

Positive Peace: the presence of the attitudes, institutions


and structures that create and sustain peaceful societies.
Negative Peace: the absence of direct violence or fear of
violence.
Conflict: a disagreement between two or more individuals
or groups. Conflict can either be nonviolent or violent and,
depending on how it is dealt with, can be either
constructive or destructive.
Resilience: the ability of nations to absorb and recover
from shocks. High levels of Positive Peace enhance
resilience in situations like natural disasters or economic
shocks.
Shock: a sudden change from inside or outside the system
that has the potential to cause harm.
Encoded norms: the values by which society selforganises.
Homeostasis: a persistent state of self-regulating and
balanced stability.

This section describes how Positive Peace can instruct us to


build and reinforce the attitudes, institutions and structures
that pre-empt conflict or help societies channel disagreements
productively rather than falling into violence. Findings from the
Global Partnership for the Prevention of Armed Conflicts
(GPPAC) review of civil society and conflict conclude that,
When tensions escalate into armed conflict, it almost always
reflects the break down or underdevelopment of routine systems
for managing competing interests and values and resulting in
the failure to satisfy basic human needs.2 Thus, the Positive
Peace framework draws out the aspects of societies that prevent
these breakdowns, based on their statistical association with the
absence of violence.
The distinguishing feature of IEPs work on Positive Peace is
that it has been empirically derived through quantitative
analysis. There are few known empirical frameworks available
to analyse Positive Peace. Historically it has largely been
understood qualitatively and based on idealistic concepts of a
peaceful society. Instead, IEPs Positive Peace framework is
based on the quantitatively identifiable common characteristics
of the worlds most peaceful countries. In order to address the
gap in this kind of quantitative research, IEP utilises the time
series data contained in the GPI, in combination with existing
peace and development literature to statistically analyse the
characteristics peaceful countries have in common. An
important aspect of this approach is to avoid value judgement
and allow statistical analysis to explain the key drivers of peace.
BOX 4.2 THE POSITIVE PEACE INDEX

IEP measures Positive Peace using the Positive Peace


Index (PPI), which measures the level of Positive Peace in
162 countries, covering 99 per cent of the worlds
population. The PPI is composed of 24 indicators to
capture the eight domains of Positive Peace. Each of the
indicators was selected based on the strength of its
statistically significant relationship to the absence of
violence. For more information and the latest results of
the PPI, see the 2015 Positive Peace Report, available
from www.visionofhumanity.org.

Self-modification: a process by which society modifies


itself to accommodate new situations and challenges.

Human beings encounter conflict regularly whether at home,


at work, among friends, or on a more systemic level between
ethnic, religious or political groups. But the majority of these
conflicts do not result in violence. Most of the time individuals
and groups can reconcile their differences without resorting to
violence by using mechanisms such as societal attitudes that
curtail violence or legal systems designed to reconcile
grievances. Conflict provides the opportunity to negotiate or
renegotiate a social contract, and as such it is possible for
constructive conflict to involve nonviolence.1 Positive Peace
facilitates change and adaptation to new dynamics.

CONCEPTUALISING AND MEASURING THE


ATTITUDES, INSTITUTIONS AND STRUCTURES
THAT BUILD A MORE PEACEFUL SOCIETY

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Positive Peace & Systems Thinking

55

IEP HAS IDENTIFIED EIGHT KEY DOMAINS, OR


PILLARS, THAT COMPRISE POSITIVE PEACE:

zz

Well-Functioning Government

zz

Good Relations with Neighbours

A well-functioning government delivers high-quality

Peaceful relations with other countries are as

public and civil services, engenders trust and

important as good relations between groups within

participation, demonstrates political stability, and

a country. Countries with positive external relations

upholds the rule of law.

are more peaceful and tend to be more politically


stable, have better functioning governments, are

zz

Sound Business Environment

regionally integrated and have lower levels of

Sound business environment The strength of

organised internal conflict. This factor is also


beneficial for business and supports foreign direct

economic conditions as well as the formal institutions

investment, tourism and human capital inflows.

that support the operation of the private sector and


determine the soundness of the business environment.
Business competitiveness and economic productivity

zz

Free and independent media disseminates

are both associated with the most peaceful countries, as

information in a way that leads to greater openness

is the presence of regulatory systems that are conducive

and helps individuals and civil society work together.

to business operations.
zz

This is reflected in the extent to which citizens can


gain access to information, whether the media is free

Equitable Distribution of Resources

and independent, and how well-informed citizens are.

Peaceful countries tend to ensure equity in access to

This leads to better decision-making and more

resources such as education and health, as well as,

rational responses in times of crisis.

although to a lesser extent, equity in income


distribution.
zz

zz

High levels of human capital


A skilled human capital base reflects the extent to

Acceptance of the Rights of Others

which societies educate citizens and promote the

Formal laws guaranteeing basic human rights and

development of knowledge, thereby improving

freedoms and the informal social and cultural norms

economic productivity, care for the young, enabling

that relate to behaviours of citizens serve as proxies

political participation and increasing social capital.

for the level of tolerance between different ethnic,

Education is a fundamental building block through

linguistic, religious, and socio-economic groups

which societies can build resilience and develop

within the country. Similarly, gender equality and

mechanisms to learn and adapt.

workers rights are important components of societies


that uphold acceptance of the rights of others.

Free flow of information

zz

Low levels of corruption


In societies with high corruption, resources are
inefficiently allocated, often leading to a lack of
funding for essential services. The resulting
inequities can lead to civil unrest and in extreme
situations can be the catalyst for more serious
violence. Low corruption can enhance confidence
and trust in institutions.

56

These pillars interact with and affect societys attitudes,


institutions and structures. High levels of Positive Peace occur
where attitudes make violence less tolerated, institutions are
more responsive to societys needs and structures underpin the
nonviolent resolution of grievances.

FIGURE 4.1 THE PILLARS OF POSITIVE PEACE


The factors of Positive Peace are highly interconnected
and interact in varied and complex ways.

Sound
business
environment

ATTITUDES

...refer to norms, beliefs, preferences and


relationships within society. Attitudes
influence how people and groups cooperate
in society, and can both impact and be
impacted upon by the institutions and
structures that society creates.

INSTITUTIONS

...are the formal bodies created by


governments or other groups, such as
companies, industry associations or labour
unions. They may be responsible for
supplying education or rule of law, for
example. The way institutions operate is
affected by both the attitudes that are
prevalent within a society and the structures
that define them.

Low levels
of corruption

Acceptance
of the rights
of others

Well
functioning
government

Equitable
distribution
of resources

PEACE

High levels
of human
capital

Free flow
of information

Good
relations
with
neighbours

Source: IEP

POSITIVE PEACE HAS THE FOLLOWING


CHARACTERISTICS:
zz

Systemic and complex: it is complex; progress


occurs in non-linear ways and can be better
understood through relationships and
communication flows rather than through a linear
sequence of events.

zz

Virtuous or vicious: it works as a process where


negative feedback loops or vicious cycles of
violence can be created and perpetuated or,
alternatively, positive feedback loops are where
virtuous cycles of peace are created and

STRUCTURES

...can be both formal and informal and serve


as a shared code-of-conduct that is broadly
applicable to most individuals. Informally, it
could be as simple as the protocol for
queuing or formally, as complex as tax law.
Interactions are often governed by informal
rules and structures, such as politeness,
societal views on morality or the acceptance
or rejection of others behaviours.

perpetuated.
zz

Preventative: though overall Positive Peace levels


tend to change slowly over time, building strength
in relevant pillars can prevent violence and violent
conflict.

zz

Underpins resilience and nonviolence: Positive


Peace builds the capacity for resilience and
incentives for nonviolent alternatives to conflict
resolution. It provides an empirical framework to
measure an otherwise amorphous concept,
resilience.

Attitudes, institutions and structures are all highly interrelated,


and can be difficult to distinguish. But what is more important
than the drawing of clear lines between them is the
understanding of how they interact as a whole.
IEP does not attempt to determine the specific attitudes,
institutions and structures necessary for Positive Peace, as these
will very much be dependent on cultural norms and specific
situations. What is appropriate in one country may not be
appropriate in another.

zz

Informal and formal: it includes both formal and


informal societal factors. This implies that societal
and attitudinal factors are equally as important as
state institutions.

zz

Supports development goals: Positive Peace


provides an environment in which development
goals are more likely to be achieved.

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Positive Peace & Systems Thinking

57

SYSTEMS THINKING:
THE NATION STATE & PEACE
By applying systems thinking to the nation state, new and unique approaches
can be developed to understand how societies work, how to better manage
the challenges they face and how to improve overall well-being.
The approach presented here is still in its early stages of
development but aims to provide a fundamentally new
framework for envisioning societies. There is a clear need to
better understand how countries can make institutions more
relevant to their citizens, be better able to adapt to global
challenges, as well as be more certain about how to effectively
increase economic wealth and human fulfilment. In an age
when serious threats to humanity are posed by our interactions
with the natural world through changes in the atmosphere,
oceans and biodiversity, systems thinking can help us better
understand our collective interdependence on these systems
and the interdependence between nations.

zz

Positive Peace is the framework developed by IEP that describes


the factors associated with peaceful societies. It consists of eight
domains that interact in multi-faceted ways, where the
importance of each domain and direction of causality will vary,
depending on individual circumstances. Systems thinking
provides a mechanism with which to understand how Positive
Peace operates and how to better apply it in developing policy.

All systems are considered open, interacting with both the


sub-systems within it, other similar systems and the super-system
within which it is contained. The nation state is made up of many
actors, units and organisations spanning the family, local
communities and public and private sectors. As all of these
operate both individually and interact with other institutions and
organisations, each can be thought of as their own open system
within the nation state. Some examples are companies, families,
unions, armies or public institutions. Similarly, nation states
interact with other nations through trading relations, regional
body membership, diplomatic exchanges or through war.

Systems theory first originated while attempting to better


understand the workings of organic organisms, such as cells or
the human body. Through such studies, it became clear that
merely understanding the individual characteristics of parts of a
system was inadequate to describe a system as a whole, which
functions as much more than the sum of its parts. When applied
to the nation state, this approach offers alternatives to
traditional or reductionist techniques of understanding change.
There are four major properties associated with systems thinking:3

zz

The system cannot be reduced to its parts as


individually the parts will have a different pattern of
behaviour.

zz

The system is self-regulating. It aims to maintain a


steady state by stabilising itself through feedback
loops. The system adjusts to create balance between
inputs, outputs and internally coded requirements so
as to maintain what is termed homeostasis.

58

The system is self-modifying: when there is a


persistent mismatch between inputs and its codes,
the system searches for a new pattern by which it can
function. This creates differentiation from the original
system and increases complexity.

zz

The system does not stand on its own. It is part of a


larger system but also contains its own sub-systems. It
also interacts with other similar systems. These
systems-of-systems adapt together.

There is one clear distinction between organisms and societies.


Organisms have very clear physical boundaries. The boundaries
of societies are less clear and can be somewhat arbitrary.
However, the nation works well as a system. Most nations have
a concept of self-identity, where citizens see themselves as
belonging to it, it has control over its territory, and it can
regulate and enforce laws.
Figure 4.2 illustrates different system levels that are relevant to
the nation state. It shows that the nation state itself is made up
of many sub-systems, including the individual, civil society and
business communities. Scaling up the view, the nation state is a
sub-system of the international community, in which it builds
and maintains relationships with other nation states and
international organisations. Finally, the international
community forms a sub-system of the biosphere. It should be
noted that any sub-system within the following diagram can
interact with a super system at any level. For example, the
individual can interact with the nation state, other nation states,
the international community and the natural environment.

FIGURE 4.2 SYSTEMS AND THE NATION STATE


The nation state is both a super and sub system depending on the field of view. The smallest sub system
can interact directly with the largest super system.

SUPER SYSTEM
Atmosphere, Biosphere, Oceans

SUB SYSTEM
International
Community

Nation
State

International
Community
Nation
State

Nation
State

Nation
State

Nation
State
House
holds

Markets
Govt

Source: IEP

CAUSALITY
Inherent in our understanding of the world and the way we
interact within it is the concept of causality. We take an action
and expect an outcome. We are so attuned to this concept that it
is built into our subconscious. We neednt think twice about
each step we take when we walk down the street because of this
built in understanding. In every-day life, physical actions have
an effect that always results in the same outcome. The
repeatability of certain scientific laws in terms of causality has
enabled great strides in human progress, and is no better
expressed than in the engineering marvels of today.
Assumptions of linear causality, however, imply that all
outcomes can be tracked back in a linear fashion to an initial
condition. The idea that things are predetermined by a set of
initial conditions leaves no room for genuine novelty, standing
in contradiction to our experience of reality. Linear causality is
useful for explaining discrete and well-isolated physical
phenomena but when multiple variables are involved it becomes
increasingly difficult to truly understand the cause.
The difficulty in applying linear causality to human beings, and
by extension societies, is best explained through an example. In a
conversation, linear causality would imply that the same words
would have the same effect on whomever they are spoken to.

However, this is clearly not the case. Take, for example, the words
that are written here. Read by three different people, each could
interpret them differently due to a number of factors, including
their background knowledge, what they may think of the writer,
or even their moods on the day. This will naturally affect their
interpretation of the text and any subsequent actions related to
the text.
This simple example clearly shows how individual human
reactions can be unpredictable. The problem of linear causality
is compounded when it is extended to social systems. In terms
of the nation state, similar actions will result in very different
outcomes in the various countries. Due to the differences in
cultural norms, a speech given at a political rally in America and
the same speech delivered in North Korea would garner
different reactions.
To account for this, systems thinking offers a more complex
view of causality through the mechanics of mutual feedback
loops. In such a view, the separation between cause and effect is
blurred. A mutual feedback loop is where two interacting
entities modify each other through their feedback. A
conversation or negotiation are good examples of mutual
feedback loops. A further example can be observed in the
relation between the free flow of information and a wellfunctioning government. Governments can regulate what

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Positive Peace & Systems Thinking

59

information is available; however, information can also change


governments. Both will respond to the action of the other. In
systems thinking, a cause is seen not as an independent force
but as an input to a system which then reacts, producing the
effect. The difference in reaction is due to different encoded
norms, or values by which society self-organises.
The concept of mutual feedback loops gives rise to the notion of
causeless correlations and forms the basis of Positive Peace.
Statistically significant correlations describe macro
relationships, but the causal relationships will vary depending
on the particular circumstances.
Furthermore, from a systems perspective, each causal factor
does not need to be understood. Rather, multiple interactions
that stimulate the system in a particular way negate the need to
understand all the causes. Processes can also be mutually causal.
For example, as corruption increases, business reacts, which in
turn changes the way corruption is undertaken. Similarly,
improved health services provide for a more productive
workforce, which in turn provides the government with higher
income and more money to invest in health.
Systems are also susceptible to tipping points in which a small
action can change the structure of the whole system. The Arab
Spring began when a Tunisian street vendor set himself alight
because he couldnt earn enough money to support himself. The
relationship between corruption and peace follows a similar
pattern. IEP research found that increases in corruption have
little effect until a certain point, after which small increases in
corruption can result in large deteriorations in peace.

HOMEOSTASIS
Homeostasis is where the system aims to maintain a certain
state or equilibrium. An example of this is the self-regulation of
the body temperature of a mammal. If the body starts to
overheat then it begins to sweat, if the body becomes cold then
the metabolism will adjust. The system attempts to make small
adjustments based on the way inputs are interpreted by its
encoded norms. The same model of understanding can be
applied to the nation state. Nation states maintain homeostasis
through encoded norms.
Encoded norms create reactions to inputs. For example, the
desire to seek food when hungry or the release of T-cells in
response to infection are encoded reactions to inputs. For the
nation state, as inflation increases, interest rates are raised to
dampen demand and when an infectious disease outbreak
occurs, medical resources are deployed to fix it.
One of the key differences between natural systems, such as the
weather or the oceans, and biological systems is that biological
systems have intent. Analogously, nation states and governing
powers also have intent. For example, when Costa Rica abolished
its military in 1948 the government-in-sitting had a clear intent
not to go to war. In contrast, other nations with large armies can
use these in serving their perceived national interests. Systems
also have the ability to modify their behaviour, based on the input
that they receive from their environment.

60

Encoded norms and intent are used to choose and maintain


homeostasis. When the state becomes unbalanced, they allow
adjustments to be made to match its performance with its intent
and encoded norms. These adjustments or actions can also affect
the inputs. This, as mentioned, is called a mutual feedback loop.
For instance, in a hypothetical event whereby two animals face off
to fight over a scrap of food, the movement of the first animal
serves as an input for the second, which in turn responds in a
novel way. This alters the memory of the first and future
responses will take this into account. In relation to a democratic
nation state, this is analogous to the continuous interactions
between two political parties or the discourse between the media
and the public.
These feedback loops provide the system with knowledge of its
performance or non-performance in relation to pre-established
goals. Given this, it may be possible to analyse political systems
through their feedback loops to better understand how healthy
they may be. Measuring how much political organisations within
a society respond to input may be one way of tracking this.
Similarly, social values can also be viewed and better recognised
by using the mutual feedback model through, for example,
understanding what behaviours are shunned and what
behaviours are encouraged within a society.

SELF-MODIFICATION
When unchecked or operating in isolation, feedback loops lead
to runaway growth or collapse. In cultures, their role can be
constructive or destructive. However, these are fundamental in
promoting self-modification, which allows the nation state to
evolve into a higher level of complexity. The effect of mutual
feedback loops can be the accumulation of capital, the
intensification of poverty or the spread of disease or new ideas.
If the external or internal factors of the nation state pressure the
system into persistent imbalance, then a new level of complexity
needs to be developed to maintain stability. In terms of
organisms, it can be viewed as genes being switched on in
response to its changing environmental factors. Within the
biosphere, it could be the mutation of species so their offspring
are better adapted to their environment. For the nation, it may
take the form of major shifts within the system. For example, as
the population of a country increases, this places stress on the
agricultural resources of the country. The nation state responds
by implementing measures which improve the yield of the
available land while building an export industry to produce
capital for the importation of food. Without the new responses
to over-population the system would slowly degrade as the
responses were inadequate to meet the changed needs. Other
examples that increase complexity for the nation state could
include the movement from an authoritarian system to
democracy. Adaptation is more likely when the nation has
higher levels of Positive Peace.
Figure 4.3 shows the process for homeostasis and selfmodification. Encoded norms and intent combine to set goals
for the nation state. The performance of the nation in relation to
these goals is then assessed by receiving input either internally
or externally. While the nation is performing acceptably with

FIGURE 4.3 HOMEOSTASIS AND SELF-MODIFICATION


Homeostasis occurs when there is balance between a systems internal goals and its
performance. If performance persistently is not matched to a nation states goals, it
will self-modify and adapt. Once this change has occurred, the nation state will
redefine its goals and attempt to maintain the new homeostasis.

Self
modification

Encoded norms
and intent

an
m
or
rf
Pe
ce
in
pu

Persistent mismatch
of performance
and goals

t
Performance
assessment

Homeostasis
Feedback
loops

Source: IEP

Goal
setting

respect to its goals and intent, the


feedback loops make minor adjustments
to maintain homeostasis. However, when
the systems performance is persistently
mismatched to desired goals and
performance, then it can begin a process
of self-modification. This process allows
the system to, in accordance with its
encoded norms, increase the complexity
of its internal structure and adapt to the
new challenge. Though figure 4.3 depicts
this process using a simple process
diagram, in reality, these mechanisms are
complex and dynamic.
The relationship between the nation
state and other systems, such as the
biosphere and atmosphere, is key to the
future survival of humanity. If these
systems become incapacitated the nation
states also weaken. Similarly, the
interdependence between nations, when
viewed holistically, fundamentally alters
the way they are seen to interact.
When applying systems thinking to the
nation state its important not to
over-complicate the analysis. What is
important is to view the system as a set
of relationships rather than events and to
understand the most important feedback
loops. Positive Peace provides a
framework from which to understand
and approach change, moving from
simple causality to holistic action.

The relationship between the nation state and other systems, such as the
biosphere and atmosphere, is key to the future survival of humanity. If these
systems become incapacitated the nation states also weaken. Similarly, the
interdependence between nations, when viewed holistically, fundamentally alters
the way they are seen to interact.

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Positive Peace & Systems Thinking

61

RESILIENCE AND
POSITIVE PEACE
The concept of resilience, which is critical to development and
peacebuilding, is both mutually reinforcing and integral to Positive Peace.
Positive Peace offers a holistic framework with which to understand why
some countries cope well with sudden change while other countries suffer
from it. Sudden changes, often referred to as shocks, include natural
disasters, epidemics and political and economic changes, but can also be
positive events, such as the introduction of a new technology or the
discovery of a new mineral resource deposit. A countrys level of resilience
reflects how well it responds to sudden changes. The strengths and
weaknesses of a countrys pillars of Positive Peace can help explain why it
manages shocks well or poorly.
This section explains the key concepts associated with resilience
and explores the interaction between Negative and Positive
Peace. The term resilience is often used with two meanings:
1.

the ability to withstand a shock and maintain the


current social system, such as high levels of health,
wealth, peace, etc., and/or

2.

the characteristic of adaptability, whereby society


changes for the better in response to a shock.

To explore this further, figure 4.4 shows a stylised depiction of


the link between resilience and Positive Peace. The attitudes,
institutions and structures described by the pillars of Positive
Peace not only provide a framework for assessing a countrys
potential for peace, but also provide a proxy for a countrys
ability to plan for and respond to change or shocks. A key reason
for this is the mutually reinforcing nature of the societal
structures underpinning the pillars. For instance, when a
country has strong formal institutions, such as a wellfunctioning legal system, in combination with strong informal

FIGURE 4.4 LINK BETWEEN RESILIENCE AND POSITIVE PEACE

Higher resilience

Strong Positive Peace and high resilience

Lower resilience

Countries with high


levels of Positive
Peace are by far the
most stable.

RESILIENCE

Positive Peace enables higher resilience. Higher levels of Positive Peace correspond to
greater resilience to shocks.

Weak Positive Peace and low resilience

Weaker Positive Peace


Source: IEP

62

POSITIVE PEACE

Stronger Positive Peace

FIGURE 4.5 IMPACT OF AN IDENTICAL SHOCK ON A HIGH AND LOW


RESILIENCE SYSTEM

Higher resilience

Shock event in a high resilience system


causes only a small change in negative peace

Shock event in a low resilience system


causes larger changes in negative peace

Lower resilience

RESILIENCE

An identical event may have starkly different impacts depending on the resilience
of a system.

Smaller changes in Negative Peace

Larger changes in Negative Peace

CHANGES IN NEGATIVE PEACE


Source: IEP

institutions, such as cohesive communities, it will theoretically


respond or adapt to specific shocks more effectively, as depicted
in figure 4.5.
IEPs research has found a link between Positive Peace and the
characteristics that make social systems stabilising and
adaptive. Additionally, it uses empirical data to show that large
shocks tend to have more severe impacts in low Positive Peace
countries than in high Positive Peace countries.
Showing this link empirically is complex. Firstly, proving
causality from one event to another, in this case, a shock leading
to a deterioration in peace, is difficult. Few, if any, deteriorations
in peace can be traced back to one source, as shown by the
continued debate over the cause of World War I. Secondly, the
impact of shocks are non-linear and have unpredictable effects
on systems. While the impact of Hurricane Katrina was
proportional to its size, the triggering of the Arab Spring from
the self-immolation of Mohammad Bouazizi was not. Given
these factors, the aim is not to predict when a shock will happen
or how a country will fare after a shock, but how well equipped
it is to rebound and adapt to the shocks it faces.
Resilience is generally understood to have two properties:
stability and adaptability. The following research looks at these
properties from three different perspectives. Firstly, maintaining
homeostasis and enabling adaptability is shown through
examining trends in the GPI. Secondly, it is demonstrated that
the relative impact of exogenous shocks, such as natural
disasters, in low Positive Peace countries tends to be larger.
Finally, it is shown that the types of endogenous shocks that can
occur from within a nation tend to be more severe in countries
where Positive Peace is weaker. From these observations a
taxonomy of shocks based on Positive Peace is developed.

POSITIVE PEACE AND TRENDS IN THE GPI


This section presents research on the link between Positive
Peace and a nations ability to, firstly, maintain homeostasis and,
secondly, self-modify to new, more desirable levels. This section
uses the Positive Peace Index (PPI) produced by IEP as a basis

for the analysis. This index covers 162 countries and is built
from 24 indicators across all eight pillars of Positive Peace to
measure the strength of the attitudes, institutions and
structures that create and sustain peaceful societies.
To explore a countrys ability to maintain homeostasis and to
self-modify, it is useful to look at changes in GPI scores since
2008 based on Positive Peace levels. A plot of country ranks of
Positive Peace and the GPI in 2008 is shown in Figure 4.6.
Using the difference in country rankings between the GPI and
PPI, IEP calculates a countrys peace gap to explore the
potential for improvements in peace, which is measured in the
GPI as the absence of violence or fear of violence.
When a country ranks higher in the PPI than in the GPI a
country is said to have a Positive Peace surplus, indicating a high
level of institutional capacity to support lower levels of violence.
Conversely, countries that rank higher in the GPI than in the PPI
will have a Positive Peace deficit and are comparatively more
vulnerable to external shocks and run a higher risk of increased
levels of violence.
On average, the majority of the worlds Positive Peace deficit
countries are in sub-Saharan Africa, with the peace gap being
greatest for low-income countries. The highly peaceful countries
are very tightly clustered in both the PPI and the GPI,
demonstrating the resilience of these countries, most of which
show only small changes in scores over the period.
Figure 4.7 (overleaf ) illustrates changes in the internal GPI score
from 2008 to 2016 for three equal groups of countries based on
PPI scores. This shows that countries with high levels of Positive
Peace are by far the most stable, with around three out of every
four countries remaining within ten per cent of 2008 levels of
peacefulness. High Positive Peace countries also had the least
number of deteriorations in internal peace, around 55 per cent
less than either of the other two categories. Figure 4.8 shows
changes in the GPI based on Positive Peace deficit or surplus. In
this figure it can be seen that nations with a surplus of Positive
Peace had the greatest number of countries improving in internal
peace after a shock. Conversely, the group of countries with a
deficit of Positive Peace had the fewest improvements after a
GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Positive Peace & Systems Thinking

63

FIGURE 4.6 POSITIVE PEACE AND THE GPI, 2008


The Positive Peace deficit is a measure of the difference between the GPI and Positive Peace. The higher the
GPI rank is in relation to Positive Peace, the more likely a deterioration in peace.

Less peaceful

140

Positive Peace Deficit


Positive Peace Equilibrium
Positive Peace Surplus

120
100
80
60

More peaceful

POSITIVE PEACE INDEX RANK 2008

160

40
20
0
0

20
More peaceful

40

60

80

100

120

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX (INTERNAL SCORE) RANK 2008

Source:

FIGURE 4.7 POSITIVE PEACE AND CHANGES IN GPI, 2008-2016

NUMBER OF COUNTRIES
(BASED ON CHANGE IN GPI 2008-2016)

Countries with high levels of Positive Peace are by far the most stable.
60

Minimal Change in GPI

> 10% Improvement in GPI

> 10% Deterioration in GPI

50
40
30
20
10
0

High

Medium

Low

POSITIVE PEACE LEVEL


Source: IEP

FIGURE 4.8 POSITIVE PEACE SURPLUS AND DEFICIT AND CHANGES IN THE GPI,
2008-2016

NUMBER OF COUNTRIES
(BASED ON CHANGE IN GPI 2008-2016)

High Positive Peace enables countries to improve their levels of peace over time.
60

Minimal Change in GPI

> 10% Improvement in GPI

50
40
30
20
10
0
PP Surplus

PP Equilibrium

POSITIVE PEACE DEFICIT/SURPLUS


Source: IEP

64

> 10% Deterioration in GPI

PP Deficit

140
Less peaceful

160

shock. The combination of stability and the ability to evolve


highlights the link between Positive Peace and resilience.

there is a period of homeostasis between 2008 and 2011 when a


shock occurs. If feedback loops are enacted then the country
returns to the level of performance prior to the shock within a
short period, as shown by case A. However, in case B the system is
able to self-modify and improve its level of performance in the
aftermath, benefiting from the shock in the long run. In case C,
the same mechanism restores stability but at a lower level of
performance. If feedback loops fail to restore some form of
stability, the system will deteriorate into dysfunction (case D).

POSITIVE PEACE AND SHOCKS


The word shock is used to describe a sudden change in some
aspect of a system. In terms of the nation state, shocks are sudden
onset events that have the potential to cause fatalities, injuries,
property damage, infrastructure damage, agricultural loss,
damage to the environment, interruption of business, or other
types of harm or loss.4 Shocks can be catastrophic events that
directly cause loss of life and/or events that trigger the outbreak
of violence. Some shocks can be positive events, such as
democratic elections, the introduction of a new technology or the
discovery of a new mineral resource deposit.

Shocks are useful phenomena with which to better understand


resilience and peace. When they occur, they affect many aspects
of an otherwise stable society and their flow-on effects can be
long term and unpredictable. Shocks can, therefore, create tense
situations that can lead to violence.
The 2010 earthquake in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, is an example of a
shock that triggered violence. During the earthquake, the National
Penitentiary in Port-au-Prince was severely damaged, allowing
over 5,000 prisoners to escape.5 At the same time, police officers
were immediately engaged in disaster response, reducing their
capacity to respond to crime and violence, and police resources
were also damaged in the earthquake.6 Chaotic conditions
facilitated the regrouping of formerly dispersed or imprisoned
gang members and, combined with general post-disaster
lawlessness, the city saw an escalation of turf wars and a rise in
homicide, assault and rape.7 The intersection of a severe shock and
existing vulnerabilities in the system, such as weak infrastructure
and an under-resourced police force, led to a deterioration in
peacefulness. However, not all shocks trigger violence.

As explained previously, there are three mechanisms that a


country uses to continue and evolve:
zz

Homeostasis is a persistent state of self-regulating and


balanced stability.

zz

Feedback loops are used to restore balance when the


homeostasis becomes imbalanced, threatened by
forces from inside or outside the system.

zz

Self-modification is when the system modifies itself to


accommodate new situations and challenges. This
tends to increase complexity in the system, often
allowing the system to become more adaptive.

Countries with high levels of Positive Peace have the attitudes,


institutions and structures that are associated with the absence
of violence. These can be understood as drivers of nonviolence.
The social characteristics that make up Positive Peace give

Feedback loops allow countries to be resilient in the aftermath of


shocks. The process of this is depicted in figure 4.9 using a
hypothetical scenario between 2008 and 2016. How a country is
operating today is its current homeostasis. In the case outlined,
FIGURE 4.9 SYSTEM RESPONSES TO A SHOCK

Homeostasis occurs when there is balance between a systems internal goals and
its performance. In the aftermath of a shock the systems feedback loops are
enacted to avoid dysfunction and restore homeostasis.

SYSTEM PERFORMANCE

Worse performance

Case D

Feedback loops fail


and system becomes
dysfunctional

Better performance

Self-modification
creates new
homeostasis

2008

Homeostatic
period

Shock

Case C
Case A - Feedback Loops
Case B

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

Source: IEP

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Positive Peace & Systems Thinking

65

people access to methods of resolving conflicts and addressing


change without the perceived need to use violence.
TAXONOMY OF SHOCKS
Social systems can experience two types of shocks. Many shocks
are exogenous: a sudden change in a variable outside the system
that impacts variables within the system. In this case, it is useful
to think of exogenous as meaning outside of the control of
policy makers. For example, natural disasters may occur inside
a country but are largely unexpected and outside of the control
of policy makers. However, other shocks such as food and
currency price shocks can be within the realm of domestic
policy although they can also be caused by factors outside of the
control of country governments.
On the other hand, social systems can also produce endogenous
shocks. Social unrest, protests, labour strikes or political
assassinations, for example, occur when people are responding
to something inherent within a system. Economic shocks
typically arise from characteristics of the economic and
governance system within a country.
There are a host of sudden events that can disrupt a society,
potentially resulting in violence. Some can even be caused by
violence, such as the refugee crises affecting Europe and Syrias
neighbours in the wake of the Syrian civil war. In Lebanon, the
influx of refugees has put downward pressure on wages,
causing economic disruption. In Europe, the influx of refugees
has overwhelmed social services.
Different types of shocks arise in different types of systems. Political
shocks, such as coups detat, occur more frequently in low Positive
Peace environments while economic shocks, such as stock market
crashes, happen more often in high Positive Peace environments.
Table 4.1 lists a variety of types of shocks in terms of their
primary levels of exogeneity or endogeneity. Events such as
natural disasters lie largely outside of the control of countries
while crises such as economic shocks arise because of the
conditions within society. Alternatively, some events can arise
from either external or internal conditions or, most likely, a
combination of the two.
TABLE 4.1 TAXONOMY OF ENDOGENOUS AND
EXOGENOUS SHOCKS
While shocks are often classified as exogenous or
endogenous, in reality most arise from a range of
exogenous or endogenous factors.
PRIMARILY EXOGENOUS

CAN BE BOTH
EXOGENOUS AND/OR
ENDOGENOUS

PRIMARILY
ENDOGENOUS

Natural Disasters

Incoming Refugees

Economic Shock

Price Shocks

Post-conflict
reintegration

Social Unrest

Invasion from a
Foreign Power

Epidemic

Industrial Accident

Pandemic

Political Crisis

Terrorism

Revolution
Civil War

66

EXOGENOUS SHOCKS
Natural disasters are the most prevalent and least predictable type
of shock. Between 2005 and 2015, there were over 2,400 natural
disasters in 196 countries affecting more than 1.8 billion people.8
They occur all over the world, and their frequency has historically
been outside the control of policy makers. Importantly, as the effect
of climate change accelerates so too may the frequency and impact
of natural disasters.
Figure 4.10 shows that natural disasters kill more people in low
Positive Peace countries. While this is striking, many factors
affect how large the likely effect from a natural disaster may be,
other than Positive Peace. Firstly, some countries are located in
geographical regions where such events are more frequent.
Secondly, some regions are more prone to more severe disasters
that naturally affect more people simply due to their magnitude.
Finally, the population density of a country is relevant, whereby
any disaster will affect more people in a higher density area than
it would in a lower density area. However, these factors are not
adequate in explaining the full extent of the discrepancy in lives
lost shown in Figure 4.10.
BOX 4.3 EMERGENCY EVENTS DATABASE

IEP used data from the Emergency Events Database


(EM-DAT) to explore the relationship between resilience
and positive peace. EM-DAT captures basic data on the
occurrence and effects of natural and technological
disasters for the years 1900 to 2015. Events are included
in the database if they meet one of the following criteria:
10 or more people reported killed
100 or more people reported affected
declaration of a state of emergency
call for international assistance.
Information on events is sourced from a variety of
sources, with preference given to data from UN agencies
and country governments.9

To explore the link between Positive Peace and the reduction of


impacts from natural disasters it is necessary to examine the
distributions of frequency, severity and population density
across different levels of Positive Peace. While there will
undoubtedly be other factors that determine the impact of a
natural disaster in a country, for brevity this report will look at
these three major areas.
Figure 4.11 shows the frequency of natural disasters by level of
Positive Peace. Figure 4.10 shows that countries at lower levels of
Positive Peace experience far more fatalities as a result of natural
disasters. Countries with weak Positive Peace have a fatality ratio
of 13:1 compared to high Positive Peace environments while the
frequency of natural disasters is much closer at 6:5. Figure 4.12
highlights that population densities in lower Positive Peace
countries are not significantly larger than higher Positive Peace
countries. Neither density nor frequency provides a full
explanation of the significant difference in loss of life from
natural disasters between high and low Positive Peace countries.

FIGURE 4.10 TOTAL NUMBER OF DEATHS FROM NATURAL


DISASTERS, 2005-2015

FIGURE 4.11 FREQUENCY OF NATURAL DISASTERS,


2005-2015

More people are killed by natural disasters in low Positive


Peace countries than high Positive Peace countries.

Natural disasters are only slightly more frequent in low


Positive Peace countries, yet they have a fatality ratio of 13:1
compared to high Positive Peace environments.
NUMBER OF NATURAL DISASTERS 2005-2015

NUMBER OF FATALITIES FROM


NATURAL DISASTERS 2005-2015

600,000

500,000

400,000

300,000

200,000

100,000

Very High

High

Medium

Low

800
700
600
500
400
300
200
100
0

POSITIVE PEACE LEVELS

Very High

High

Medium

Low

POSITIVE PEACE LEVELS

Source: EMDAT, IEP

Source: EMDAT, IEP

Figure 4.13 (overleaf ) depicts the density of total numbers of


people affected by natural disasters by levels of Positive Peace.10
While low Positive Peace countries have had a number of large
events affecting more than 100,000 people, in general figure
4.13 shows only minor differences in the number of people
affected in low and high Positive Peace countries. Figure 4.14
however shows that higher Positive Peace countries suffer more
in terms of economic loss from natural disasters.

If cross-country data was available on measures of severity, such


as the Richter or Beaufort scales, a more accurate model could
be developed that may alter the outcome of this analysis.

FIGURE 4.12 POPULATION DENSITIES AND POSITIVE PEACE, 2014


Population density is not significantly greater in low Positive Peace countries
and so does not account for the larger loss of life in these nations.
1250

Bangladesh

POPULATION DENSITY

1000

750
Mauritius
500

South Korea

El Salvador
Trinidad and Tobago

250

Netherlands

Very High

Rwanda India
Lebanon
Philippines Sri Lanka
Viet Nam
Jamaica
Dominican Republic

High

Medium

Burundi

Haiti

Pakistan
North Korea
Nigeria

Low

POSITIVE PEACE
Source: WORLD BANK, IEP

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Positive Peace & Systems Thinking

67

FIGURE 4.14 PROPERTY DAMAGE FROM NATURAL


DISASTERS BY POSITIVE PEACE, 2005-2015

The severity of natural disasters as indicated by numbers


of people affected do not significantly differ depending on
Positive Peace.

High Positive Peace countries incur larger property damage


due to natural disasters.
100%
50% of natural disasters cost more
than $2,386,107 in high Positive Peace
countries compared to $181,577
in low Positive Peace countries

1.0

Positive Peace Level


Very High
High
Medium
Low

0.5

75%

CUMULATIVE DENSITY

DENSITY OF PEOPLE AFFECTED

FIGURE 4.13 NUMBER OF PEOPLE AFFECTED BY


NATURAL DISASTERS, BY POSITIVE PEACE, 2005-2015

50%

25%

0.0

1,000

Positive Peace Level


Very High
High
Medium
Low

100,000

TOTAL NUMBER PEOPLE AFFECTED (LOG 10)


Source: EMDAT, IEP

0%
100

10,000

1,000,000

100,000,000

DAMAGE IN '000S US 2005 DOLLARS (LOG 10)


Source: EMDAT, IEP

ENDOGENOUS SHOCKS
Endogenous shocks are sudden onset events that arise from
conditions inside society. Particular conditions may change
rapidly or build up over time and result in unexpected events
that have the potential to spark violence. Civil unrest is a good
example as there can be months or years of ongoing conflict
without violence that quickly turns violent because of a sudden,
destabilising event. Economic shocks are similar. Economic
conditions can be misaligned for a long time before resulting in
a sudden crash or crisis that has the potential to spark riots or
other types of violence.
Despite being engendered by the social system, endogenous
shocks are still unpredictable. It is often impossible to know
when, where or how they will arise. But the data does show that
different types of shocks occur in low versus high Positive Peace
settings and that more shocks overall take place in low Positive
Peace countries.
This suggests that it is possible to reduce the impact of shocks
by proactively building resilience and Positive Peace.
Additionally, countries with high levels of Positive Peace are less
likely to deteriorate in Negative Peace post-shock. The onset of
different types of shocks is shown in figure 4.15.
Figure 4.15 highlights that twice as many infrastructure
accidents occur in countries with low Positive Peace than those
with high levels. This is intuitive, as higher Positive Peace
countries will generally have better infrastructure due to an
efficient well-functioning government, a sound business
environment and higher levels of income. Furthermore,
economic shocks and crises are far more prevalent in very high

68

Positive Peace countries. Again, this is intuitive as the risk of


financial shocks increases as financial institutions proliferate
and become more and more integral to a countrys economy.
Violent shocks such as regime changes, coups detat and
revolutions have been more prevalent in countries with lower
Positive Peace, with 84 per cent of these occurring in medium to
low Positive Peace countries. Genocide, being jus cogens in
international law, is the largest endogenous systemic breakdown
investigated and since 2005 has occurred in three countries.
Offensives by the state during the Sri Lankan civil war in 2008
have been classified as genocide against the Tamils. In the Central
African Republic, following the forcible displacement of the
President Boziz regime on 24 March 2013, the government
engaged in predatory actions against the population. The Sunni
extremists organized under the banner of the Islamic State in
Iraq since 2014 have targeted Yazidis and Christians in their
controlled territories. It is estimated that these operations have
killed around 5,000 people.

BOX 4.4 ENDOGENOUS SHOCKS


DATA

FIGURE 4.15 DISTRIBUTION OF ENDOGENOUS SHOCKS, 2005-2015


Lower Positive Peace countries experience more industrial and political shocks
while higher Positive Peace countries suffer more economic shocks.
Genocide Onset
(20052014)

Violent Conflict Onset


(20052014)

IEP has sourced the following data


for creating a database of shocks:

PERCENTAGE
OF TOTAL
INCIDENTS
60%

Political Shock Onset


(20052014)

18

38

70

40%
20%
0%

Economic Shock Onset


(20052010)

Infrastructure Accident
(20052015)

61

164

Very High

20

17

253

349

High

Medium

Infrastructure accidents are from


EMDAT and include transport,
industrial and technological
disasters.
Economic shocks and crises are
from Reinhart and Rogoff (2010)
and include incidence of crises in
banking, currency, inflation crises,
sovereign debt and stock markets.
Political shocks are from Polity IV
and include regime changes,
coup-detats and revolutions.

358

Violent conflict is from the UCDP


Battle deaths dataset.

Low

POSITIVE PEACE
Source: EMDAT, INSCR, Reinhart and Rogoff, UCDP, IEP

SYSTEMS MAP OF POSITIVE PEACE AND


RESILIENCE
As has been discussed, Positive Peace allows a nation state to build
resilience in order to maintain stability while also being able to
recover from shocks. Additionally, high Positive Peace countries
improve through adaptation to new challenges.
Figure 4.16 explains the links between exogenous and
endogenous shocks and Positive and Negative Peace. Countries
can reduce the impact of exogenous shocks but not the likelihood.
Conversely, they mitigate endogenous shocks by reducing the
likelihood and impact. This depiction shows that building
Positive Peace assists in reducing the risk of violent exogenous
and endogenous shocks in two ways. The first is that it directly
reduces the potential for conflict within a country. The second is
an indirect relationship, in that Positive Peace minimises the
potential for shocks interacting with existing negative drivers,
which could create a more volatile situation.
These observations highlight two important aspects of resilience.
The first is that building resilience does not have to be direct,
using systems thinking it is easy to see how improvements in
one area can strengthen resilience in another. Secondly, by
building Positive Peace a country can shift the types of shocks
it is vulnerable to from violent ones, such as revolutions and
regime changes, to non-violent ones, such as infrastructural and
economic. By reducing the risk of internal threats, a country will
be able to maintain homeostasis more easily.

FIGURE 4.16 RESILIENCE BUILDING IN A POSITIVE PEACE


SYSTEM
Positive Peace can be used to not only build resilience
directly but also to shift the shocks a country is exposed to
from violent to nonviolent.

Negative Peace

Positive Peace

Likelihood of
Violent
Endogenous
Shocks

Impact of
Exogenous
Shock

Resilience building
Resilience reducing
Source: IEP

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Positive Peace & Systems Thinking

69

BUILDING POSITIVE PEACE


RECOMMENDATIONS FOR CATALYSING SYSTEMIC CHANGE

Violence and conflict continue to thwart efforts to meet humanitarian


goals and tackle major challenges, such as climate change orpoverty
reduction. In 2015, the economic impact of containing or dealing with the
consequences of violence was 13.3 per cent of world GDP, yet in
comparison far less is devoted to addressing the underlying conditions
that lead to violence or conflict.
IEPs analysis demonstrates that building resilience in a
preventative manner, by building high levels of Positive Peace, is
an effective way to reduce the potential for violence. But how
should countries go about doing this?

Nepal is an example of a country where change was driven by


progress in its weakest pillar. Nepal was one of the five countries
with the greatest improvement in the Positive Peace Index from
2005 to 2015. In 2005, Nepals weakest pillar of Positive Peace
was free flow of information and this pillar showed the largest
improvement from 2005 to 2015, as shown in figure 4.17. Over
the course of the next decade, Nepals score for free flow of
information improved by 30 per cent, driven by a dramatic
increase in mobile phone penetration in the country. Shortly
thereafter, the country began to show improvement in other areas
of Positive Peace. Between 2007 and 2011, Nepal made
significant gains in free flow of information, acceptance of the
rights of others and equitable distribution of resources. In 2016,
Nepals internal peace score is two percent better than it was in
2008 and its Positive Peace score was seven per cent better in
2015 than in 2005.

IEP offers two recommendations as entry points to changing


peace systems:

1. FOCUS ON THE WEAKEST PILLAR


This intervention aims at targeting the weakest pillar and then
building the appropriate actions to stimulate it. This should
have the benefit of not only improving the pillar but due to
interdependencies, also have a positive flow on effect to the
other pillars of Positive Peace.

FIGURE 4.17 POSITIVE PEACE PILLAR SCORES IN NEPAL, 2005-2015

<--Stronger

POSITIVE PEACE PILLAR SCORE

Weaker

Improvements in free flow of information led the improvements in Positive Peace that Nepal achieved over the decade.
4.5
4.3
4.1
3.9

Low Levels of Corruption

3.7

Sound Business Environment


Well-Functioning Government
Acceptance of the Rights of Others
Good Relations with Neighbours
High Levels of Human Capital

3.5
3.3
3.1

Equitable Distribution of Resources

2.7
2.5
2005

Source: IEP

70

FREE FLOW OF INFORMATION

2.9

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2. STIMULATE THE WHOLE SYSTEM


The aim of this approach is to stimulate the system from many
different angles and involves finding an intervention for each
pillar which has the following characteristics:
zz

The intervention is practical and can be implemented


in the current political dynamics.

zz

The intervention will have an impact that is


substantial.

zz

The intervention will have an effect over the shorter


term as well as the longer term.

This kind of system-wide improvement can create the


environment for a virtuous cycle of peacebuilding.
IEP has piloted a program to develop conversations around
practical, measurable and impactful investments in the key
drivers of peace.
IEPs Positive Peace workshops are designed to bring together
key stakeholders at the national and local level. Workshops seek
to meet two main goals. The first is to ground the globally
derived factors of Positive Peace in a more localised context,
which includes reality testing whether workshop participants
see the factors as salient within their country or community.
The second is to identify concrete investments that can be made
in the Positive Peace factors themselves.
ZIMBABWE POSITIVE PEACE WORKSHOP CASE STUDY
IEP coordinated a workshop on Positive Peace in November
2015 in Harare, Zimbabwe, in partnership with the National
Peace Trust, a Zimbabwean organisation. The workshop was
supported by IEP and led by the National Peace Trust. Over 50
participants attended, including senior government officials,
including Zimbabwes Vice President, the Honourable ED
Mnangagwa, who made introductory remarks, followed by civil
society leaders, church leaders, academics and NGO
representatives. The workshop took place over two days and
included presentations by identified experts in each of the eight
Positive Peace factors.
The workshop brought together representatives of the ruling
party, opposition parties and civil society aligned with both sides
of politics. One of the tangible outcomes of the workshop is
follow-up discussions, planned for later in 2016, about how civil
society and government can work together more effectively
around the eight Positive Peace pillars.

The most profound observations from an analysis of the Global


Peace Index, which forms an important background for this
project, show that those countries with stronger levels of
Positive Peace also tend to be those that experience more
virtuous cycles of peace. Viable initiatives are needed to
strengthen the Positive Peace domains and in the process build
consensual approaches to address the social, economic and
political issues necessary for durable peace.
To understand the concept of Positive Peace in a southern
African context, there has to be an understanding of local,
regional and national historical and social factors. This lays the
groundwork for developing locally relevant conceptualisations
of the Positive Peace pillars, which can then be put to use in
formal processes of governance.
In southern Africa, the spiritual relationship between people
and groups is fundamental in creating peace. Workshop
participants emphasised that the collective nature of many
African cultures values Ubuntu and Hunhu, the connective
social tenets that give emphasis to the collective through which
individuals are connected. These principles create the social
equilibrium that maintain peace and the capacity to resolve
conflict in African communities. When this equilibrium is lost,
conflict is often the outcome.
To maintain this equilibrium, Negative Peace is only a starting
point. The cultural heritage of southern African communities
needs to be taken into account when crafting locally relevant
approaches to Positive Peace. While tangible and material needs
identified in the Pillars of Peace need to be met to help maintain
peace in society, the spiritual and communal side of African
culture also needs to be included. The lessons from this
communal history can then inform deeper processes of
peacebuilding in the West, balancing the preference for formal
statebuilding and peacebuilding processes.
To fully engage in the development of Positive Peace, there has
to be a shift away from the accusatory approaches to one that
focuses on the shared processes of developing peace. While
respecting the cultural and spiritual aspects of African societies,
there also needs to be a basis for agreement on definitions of
peace. A key question that underpins this is: what is the
definitive outcome peace is intended to achieve? Is it peace for
its own sake, peace for economic and political development, or a
value-free programme meant to achieve stable technocracy?
Through a shared understanding of peace in the wider southern
Africa region, complex systems and social processes can be
explored using innovative tools and methods to find patterns of
Positive Peace across communities.

BACKGROUND TO THE WORKSHOP

The relative peace of a society is underpinned by the material


and cultural circumstances of that society. Thus, the overall
objective of the workshop was to set up an action-orientated
steering group to identify and analyse possible initiatives on the
pillars of peace, as well as support efforts to bring those
initiatives to fruition.

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Positive Peace & Systems Thinking

71

INITIATIVES RELATED TO POSITIVE PEACE IN SOUTHERN AFRICA

The outcome of the National Peace Trust and IEPs Positive Peace workshop was a plan for one
practical initiative to address each of the eight pillars of Positive Peace.

Sound Business Environment


Strengthening the Links between Government and Business
Commercial Arbitration Centre
This initiative develops government and business rapport and
ability to work together to develop regulatory and social
structures that make the most of human capital, while
attracting foreign investment. Governments and businesses are
not competitors but must be aware of the inter-relatedness
between effective regulation and positive business practices.

Free Flow of information


Words Are Not Stones Campaign
Media Institute of Southern Africa
A campaign to decriminalise free expression and restructure
defamation laws to increase free flows of information in the
media. Free flow of information is key to democracy, and this
can be further enshrined in the SADC Protocol on Culture,
Information and Sport.

Acceptance of the Rights of Others


Equitable Distribution of Resources
Designing and Testing Land Conflict Resolution Models and
Equitable Distribution of Resources
Institute of Agro Studies
This initiative develops conflict resolution processes to manage
conflicts related to land use and access issues. Follows on from
land reforms during the 2000s, tying in local mediation
processes with official legal processes.

Training Womens Clubs for Engagement with Traditional


Leaders
Womens Bureau
This initiative has been developed to engage womens clubs in
local settings, providing training on best practices for engaging
with local and traditional leadership on youth, food and
peacebuilding issues.

High Human Capital Development


Well-Functioning Government
Community Participation in the Local Authority Budgetary
Processes: Strengthening Local Government Institutions for
Effective Service Delivery
Africa Bureau of Strategic Studies
This project aims to increase the quality and relevance of
government services. It proposes making the budgeting process
at the local and national level open to citizen consultation and
participation so their needs are encoded into the spending
processes that fund public services.

Good Relations with Neighbours


Promoting a Regional Citizen Ethic
Zimbabwe Electoral Commission
The Southern African Development Community (SDAC) regional
body has an official position on promoting good relations
between neighbouring states but this does not extend into shared
notions of civil ethic and participation at the citizen level. This
project is designed to encourage greater cooperation between the
SADC bodies, governments and civil society organisations. It
would build trust between government leaders and civil society,
improving the relations between neighbouring states.

72

Labs for Girls


Data Africa
This initiative addresses the need for girls to have increased
opportunities to pursue education and careers in the sciences. It
will set up special laboratory spaces to increase girls
participation in science at 50 secondary schools, increasing girls
and womens input into science and increasing their capacity to
live independently.

Low Levels of Corruption


Mapping Of Informational Needs, Packaging and
Dissemination of Information to Enhance Active Citizen
Participation in Promoting Accountability
Zimbabwe Environmental Lawyers Association
This project will gather relevant legal and civil society data to
empower citizens to check government corruption and demand
their rights under the law. It will make this information
manageable through data visualisation and infographics that
people can easily digest and make use of.

SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT
GOAL 16

RTY
OVE
GER
NG
HUN
LLBEI
ZERO
& WE
H
T
L
A
D HE
GOO
N
CATIO
Y EDU
QUALIT
Y
EQUALIT
GENDER
ANITATION
TER AND S
A
W
N
A
LE
C
D CLEAN ENERGY
AFFORDABLE AN

NO P

DECENT WORK AND ECONOM

IC GROWTH

INDUSTRY, INNOVATION AND INFRASTRUCTURE


REDUCED INEQUALITIES

SUSTAINABLE CI

RESPONSIB
CLIMAT

LIFE B
LIFE O

PEAC
PAR
T

N L AN

E , JU

LE CONSU

E ACTIO

ELOW

TIES AND COMM

MPTION A

UNITIES

ND PRODU

WATER

STIC
E

AND
STRO
NER
SHIP
NG I
NSTI
S FO
TUTI
R TH
ONS
E GO
ALS

CTION

ARE THE GOAL 16 TARGETS MEASURABLE?


TARGET INDICATORS & DATA AVAILABILITY

TARGET 16.1
16.1.1

16.1.2

16.1.3

16.1.4

Target 16.1 significantly reduce all forms of violence and related death rates
everywhere. Can be measured through four indicators. It is most directly
measured by the Global Peace Index.
The biggest challenge will be measuring 16.1.3 Percentage of the population
subjected to physical, psychological or sexual violence in the previous 12 months.

TARGET 16.2
16.2.1

16.2.2

16.2.3

Target 16.2 end abuse, exploitation, trafficking and all forms of violence
against and torture of children. This is particularly difficult to measure based on
the existing data. All forms of trafficking, exploitation and crimes against children
are under-reported for a range of reasons.
The biggest challenge will be measuring 16.2.3 Percentage of young women and
men aged 1824 who experienced sexual violence by age 18.

TARGET 16.3
16.3.1

16.3.2

TARGET 16.4
16.4.1

16.4.2

Target 16.3 promote the rule of law at the national and international levels
and ensure equal access to justice for all.
The biggest challenge will be measuring 16.3.1 Crime reporting rate (the
percentage of victims of violence in the last 12 months who reported their
victimisation to competent authorities or other officially recognised conflict
resolution mechanisms).

Target 16.4 significantly reduce illicit financial and arms flows, strengthen
the recovery and return of stolen assets and combat all forms of organized
crime.
By definition, those engaged in illicit financial or arms flows will not want their
activity known. As such, there will be great difficulties in creating a measure that
is direct and meaningful for this target.
The biggest challenge will be measuring 16.4.1 Total value of inward and outward
illicit financial flows (in current United States dollars).

TARGET 16.5
16.5.1

16.5.2

TARGET 16.6
16.6.1

16.6.2

Target 16.5 substantially reduce corruption and bribery in all their forms.
IEP has previously found there is a relationship between peace and corruption.
This target measures the proportion of private citizens and businesses that have
had contact with public officials asking for bribes.

Target 16.6 develop effective, accountable and transparent institutions at all


levels. The two indicators which are designed to measure this target focus on
financial accountability and reporting of satisfaction with public services.
Target 16.6.2 Proportion of the population satisfied with their last experience of
public services is slightly behind 16.6.1 in readiness. There is only 1 indicator in this
target. The percentage of persons who had at least one contact with a public
official, who paid a bribe to a public official, or were asked for a bribe by these
public officials, in the previous 12 months.

74

Data available
Data not available

TARGET 16.7
16.7.1

16.7.2

Target 16.7 ensure responsive, inclusive, participatory and representative


decision-making at all levels. A core component of development includes
participation in the decisions which have an impact on an individual or groups life
and wellbeing.
The biggest challenge will be measuring 16.7.1 Proportions of positions (by age
group, sex, persons with disabilities and population groups) in public institutions
(national and local legislatures, public service, and judiciary) compared to national
distributions.

TARGET 16.8
16.8.1

Target 16.8 is to broaden and strengthen the participation of developing


countries in the institutions of global governance.
The indicator to measure this is 16.8.1 Percentage of members and voting rights of
developing countries in international organisations. In order to be measured it will
require a decision on which institutions to include. This is one of the few indicators in
Goal 16 that could be measured immediately as it does not require additional input.

TARGET 16.9
16.9.1

Target 16.9 provide legal identity for all, including birth registration.
The indicator to measure this is 16.9.1 Percentage of children under 5 whose births
have been registered with a civil authority, disaggregated by age. Registration of
children is the first step for recognising their rights under the law. Furthermore,
registration helps ensure that children are counted and can access the services of
the state.

TARGET 16.10

Target 16.10 ensure public access to information and protect fundamental


freedoms, in accordance with national legislation and international agreements.

16.10.1

This target is very similar to the Positive Peace measures of free flow of information
and acceptance of the rights of others.

16.10.2

The proxy indicators chosen to measure this are the numbers of verified cases of
killing, kidnapping, enforced disappearance, arbitrary detention and torture of
journalists, associated media personnel, trade unionists and human rights advocates
in the previous 12 months as well as measures of public access to information.

TARGET 16 A & B
16.A

Target 16 A seeks to strengthen relevant national institutions, including through


international cooperation, for building capacity at all levels, in particular in
developing countries, to prevent violence and combat terrorism and crime.
This is addressed by compliance with Paris Principles for independent human rights
institutions.

16.B

Target 16 B is to promote and enforce non-discriminatory laws and policies for


sustainable development.
This indicator would benefit from survey collections.

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Sustainable Development Goal 16

75

MEASURING
GOAL 16
On 1 January 2016, the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) of the
2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development adopted by UN member
states in September 2015 officially came into force. They provide an
overarching, comprehensive and integrated framework for global action
on a vast range of critical issues for the next 15 years. Goal 16 is dedicated
to the promotion of peaceful and inclusive societies for sustainable
development, the provision of access to justice for all and building
effective, accountable institutions at all levels.
KEY FINDINGS

IEPs comprehensive audit of the existing data for Goal


16 indicates that it is measurable, although with many
limitations.

Fifteen of the 23 indicators in Goal 16 can be measured


by currently existing sources. The remaining eight
indicators can be measured by proxy indicators.

There are still significant challenges to data availability,


reliability, timeliness and objectivity. It will take
significant time and investment for National Statistical
Offices to develop the necessary statistical capacity to
measure Goal 16.

Third party initiatives will be required to fill the data


gaps and act as a source of independent verification for
the National Statistical Offices.

The targets in Goal 16 are relevant to many of IEPs


Positive Peace factors.

Although this section focuses solely on Goal 16, as this is the


area where IEP has the most relevant domain knowledge, the 17
Goals are universal, interconnected and need to be viewed
holistically. Enduring environments of peace can only be
achieved through holistic approaches. The emphasis on the
interconnectedness between prevention, sustaining peace and
development is in line and compatible with IEPs Positive Peace
framework which views societal development as systemic.
Goal 16 is the outcome of the international communitys
acknowledgement that peace is fundamental to development. By
annually measuring the levels of peace in over 160 countries
worldwide, IEP has shown that peace is not an abstract concept
but something that can be tracked and actioned. The recognition

76

by the international community that peace can and should be


measured for development outcomes is indeed a very positive shift.
Goal 16 aims to promote just, peaceful and inclusive societies. It
consists of 12 targets, measuring direct violence, drivers of
violence, governance and justice. Such an approach is highly
compatible with IEPs research which addresses both Negative
and Positive Peace. Goal 16 is a measure of key aspects of both
Negative Peace, which is defined as the absence of violence and
the fear of violence, as well as Positive Peace, which is defined as
the attitudes, institutions and structures that support and
sustain peaceful societies.
The 17 SDGs include 169 targets and have been created through
a collaborative process over several years. As the goals were only
recently agreed to, there is not universal coverage, but proxies
are available for most measures. This section only audits third
party data; it does not audit the availability of administrative
data from National Statistical Offices.
An audit of data that could be used to measure Goal 16 found
that there is no existing sources of data that cover the full scope
and disaggregation required for any one indicator.
However, of the 23 indicators chosen to measure Goal 16:

Two indicators can be measured immediately and be


fully disaggregated. These are the measures of the
independence of national human rights institutions and
the representation of developing countries in
international organisations.

An additional 13 indicators can be measured immediately


but do not have disaggregation or full coverage.

A close or similar measure is available for seven


indicators.

One indicator has only proxy measures available.

There are measures to gauge progress for all indicators.

Goal 16 does however present a number of potential


methodological concerns. In the spirit of the SDGs being
country led, the intention is for many of the measurements to be
led by National Statistical Offices (NSOs). However, of the 12
targets in Goal 16, ten face potential conflicts of interest in
measurement by the state. Currently, there are a number of
third party organisations that measure many of the indicators
for Goal 16 which can be used for independent verification.
These include the Small Arms Survey which measures the illicit
trade in small arms and light weapons, the World Justice
Project which measures the rule of law, Transparency
International which measures press freedom and Peace
Research Institute Oslo which measures conflict-deaths. Also,

some indicators do not necessarily relate to the achievement of


targets. Nine of the 12 targets in Goal 16 are not adequately
measured by the indicators that have been selected.
As a result of this audit, IEP recommends that independent third
party organisations provide complimentary support to NSOs and
offer a useful benchmark against which to compare results. One
such effort is an informal grouping of independent research
organisations and networks that will measure and publish Goal
16 using available data. The grouping currently includes the
Global Forum for Media Development, the Institute for
Democracy and Electoral Assistance, Namati, the Peace Research
Institute Oslo, Research 4 Development, Saferworld, the Small
Arms Survey, the Sustainable Development Solutions Network,
Transparency International, the Transparency, Accountability
and Participation Network, the World Justice Project and IEP.

GOAL 16: PEACE, JUSTICE AND


STRONG INSTITUTIONS
Goal 16 is one of 17 Global Goals that make up the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable
Development. The SDGs build upon the foundation of the Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs) which ended in 2015, but focus more on the root
causes of poverty and development while recognising that an integrated
approach is crucial for progress across the multiple goals. The SDGs reflect that
conflict and instability are significant impediments for development.
EFFECT OF CONFLICT ON ACHIEVING THE
MDGS

These fragile and conflict-affected countries achieved


significantly less progress than other developing countries in the
MDGs. On average only 16 per cent of these countries met or
made progress on their MDGs targets. Fragile and conflict
affected countries were on average 25 per cent more likely to
have missed their MDG goals than other countries.
MDG indicators for which the majority of fragile and conflictaffected countries had the poorest results for, were those that
addressed child mortality, maternal health and environmental

On average, fewer countries that were in conflict situations


achieved their Millennium Development Goals than other
countries.
100%

PROPORTION OF COUNTRIES

Conflict has prevented many countries from reaching their


development goals. There are 33 states that have been identified
as fragile and in conflict situations by the World Bank. This
includes countries currently in conflict such as Afghanistan,
Iraq and Syria. It also includes countries that are fragile but not
in conflict and have had historical conflicts or are politically
unstable such as Bosnia and Herzegovina, Cote dIvoire, Kosovo
and Timor-Leste.

FIGURE 5.1 AVERAGE PROGRESS IN MILLENNIUM


DEVELOPMENT GOALS FOR FRAGILE AND CONFLICT
COUNTRIES VS OTHER COUNTRIES

90%
80%

Off target
or no data

Off target
or no data

70%
60%

Some
progress

50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0%

Some
progress
Met target
or progress

Met target
or progress

FRAGILE AND CONFLICTAFFECTED COUNTRIES

ALL OTHER COUNTRIES

Source: World Bank, IEP Calculations

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Sustainable Development Goal 16

77

FIGURE 5.2 PERFORMANCE IN MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS FOR FRAGILE AND CONFLICT-AFFECTED COUNTRIES
Fragile states under-performed the global average or had insufficient data in the vast majority of indicators.

Met target or progress

Some progress

Off target or no data

MDG 1.1 - EXTREME POVERTY


MDG 1.9 - UNDERNOURISHMENT
MDG 2.1 - PRIMARY COMPLETION
MDG 3.1 - EDUCATION GENDER PARITY
MDG 4.1 - UNDER-5 MORTALITY
MDG 4.2 - INFANT MORTALITY
MDG 5.1 - MATERNAL MORTALITY
MDG 7.8 - IMPROVED WATER
MDG 7.9 - IMPROVED SANITATION
0

10

15

20

25

30

Number of countries
Source: World Bank, IEP Calculations

Many of the fragile and conflictaffected countries have difficulty in


maintaining the necessary systems
to adequately capture data.
FIGURE 5.3 WORLD BANK ESTIMATES OF STATISTICAL
CAPACITY IN CONFLICT, FRAGILE AND NON-CONFLICT
COUNTRIES

High capacity

80
70

The MDG process demonstrated the length of time required


to build capacity to capture the relevant data for the
international measures. The first indicator for the MDGs was
to halve the proportion of people whose income is less than
$1.25 a day by 2015. However, in 2015 there were slightly less
than half of all countries that had at least two data points on
this measure. The effect of this is that progress in these
countries could not be determined as at least two data points
are required to make a calculation.1
IDENTIFYING OVERLAPS WITH ACTUAL DRIVERS OF
VIOLENCE

50

30
20
10
0

CONFLICT
COUNTRIES

Source: World Bank, IEP Calculations

78

Additionally, many of the fragile and conflict-affected countries


have difficulty in maintaining the necessary systems to adequately
capture the data. This can lead to poor quality data, resulting in
situations appearing worse or better than what they are.

60

40
Low capacity

STATISTICAL CAPACITY SCORE

Countries that are fragile and conflict-affected have much


lower statistical capacity than all other countries. This means
they undertake fewer surveys less frequently with less
methodological rigour.

sustainability. No conflict-affected country achieved the goal of


reducing by two-thirds the under-five mortality rate between
1990 and 2015.

FRAGILE
NON-CONFLICT
COUNTRIES
COUNTRIES

Through Goal 16, the SDGs recognise the long reaching


consequences of conflict and violence for development outcomes.
Not only is violence a severe hindrance for development, it can
reverse many years of development gains. Conflict greatly affects
economic development by reducing foreign direct investment and
the broader macro-economic environment. This affects poverty, life
expectancy and education outcomes, as well as indicators which
are essential for longer term development like infant mortality and

access to services. Everyday interpersonal violence which Goal 16


also measures, affects all countries and has detrimental social and
economic impacts in every country in the world. Even high income
countries have interpersonal violence that severely impacts on
human wellbeing and socio-economic progress. This underscores
the universality of the Goal and its applicability to all nations.
For nations affected by armed conflict, there is also the concept
of a conflict trap, whereby the impact of conflict further
increases some of the risk factors of conflict. Low socioeconomic development can support the conditions for social
violence and conflict, but it is also a consequence of violence and
conflict. Countries with weak institutions are much more
vulnerable to conflict as they do not have an effective means for
conflict resolution. Losses in GDP from conflict in 2015 were
estimated to be nearly $119 billion in PPP. As conflict impacts
the economy in the immediate term, potentially destroying
entire industries, the impact of conflict is also long term,
reducing future development opportunities.
In order to address the drivers of violence and conflict the focus
cannot be purely on the traditional development agenda of
health, education and poverty. Rather, as Goal 16 recognises,
governance, inequalities and institutions need to be addressed

as well as violence reduction. IEP terms this focus on the drivers


of peace as Positive Peace or the attitudes, institutions and
structures which create and sustain peaceful societies.
PEACE AND THE SDGs
Goal 16 seeks to measure instances of violence, as well as some
of the drivers of peace. The first two targets of Goal 16 focus on
actual measures of violence which is also known as Negative
Peace, a direct measure of violence or fear of violence. Target
16.1 is to significantly reduce all forms of violence and related
death rates everywhere. This includes conflict-related deaths as
well as deaths from homicide.
Goal 16 also recognises that in order to reduce violence there is
a need to focus on certain attitudes, institutions and structures
which create and sustain peaceful societies. IEP deals with such
factors through the concept of Positive Peace. These same
factors also lead to many other positive outcomes which society
feels are important. Therefore, Positive Peace is described as
creating an optimum environment for human potential to
flourish. IEP has empirically developed a framework for Positive
Peace which is based on eight factors. These Pillars are partly
represented in Goal 16.

WELL-FUNCTIONING
GOVERNMENT

SOUND BUSINESS
ENVIRONMENT

LOW LEVELS OF
CORRUPTION

HIGH LEVELS OF HUMAN


CAPITAL

GOOD RELATIONS WITH


NEIGHBOURS

FREE FLOW OF
INFORMATION

EQUITABLE DISTRIBUTION
OF RESOURCES

SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS

ACCEPTANCE OF THE
RIGHTS OF OTHERS

VIOLENCE AND CONFLICT

TABLE 5.1 COVERAGE OF THE EIGHT POSITIVE PEACE FACTORS AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS

Goal 1 End poverty in all its forms everywhere

Goal 2 End hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition and promote sustainable
agriculture

Goal 3 Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages

Goal 4 Ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning
opportunities for all

Goal 5 Achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls

Goal 6 Ensure availability and sustainable management of water and sanitation for all

Goal 7 Ensure access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all

Goal 8 Promote sustained, inclusive and sustainable economic growth, full and productive
employment and decent work for all

Goal 9 Build resilient infrastructure, promote inclusive and sustainable industrialization and
foster innovation

Goal 10 Reduce inequality within and among countries

Goal 11 Make cities and human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable

Goal 12 Ensure sustainable consumption and production patterns

Goal 13 Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts

Goal 14 Conserve and sustainably use the oceans, seas and marine resources for sustainable
development

Goal 15 Protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems, sustainably
manage forests, combat desertification, and halt and reverse land degradation and halt
biodiversity loss

Goal 16 Promote peaceful and inclusive societies for sustainable development, provide access to
justice for all and build effective, accountable and inclusive institutions at all levels
Goal 17 Strengthen the means of implementation and revitalize the global partnership for
sustainable development

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Sustainable Development Goal 16

79

FIGURE 5.4 POSITIVE PEACE FACTORS AND VIOLENCE BY SDG COVERAGE


The SDGs place an emphasis on high levels of human capital and well-functioning government.
High levels of human capital
(25%)

Violence and conflict (2%)


Low levels of corruption (2%)
Free flow of information (3%)
Sound business environment
(8%)

Well-functioning
government (22%)
Good relations with neighbours
(9%)

Equitable distribution of resources


(15%)

Acceptance of the rights of others


(14%)

Source: IEP

Figure 5.4 shows the distribution of Positive Peace factors


among the SDGs. The SDGs have particular focus on two of the
Positive Peace factors. Of the 17 SDGs, 15 are related to the
Positive Peace factor of high levels of human capital. This is
unsurprising as this factor is most directly related to levels of
development. There is also an emphasis on well-functioning
government in the SDGs with relevance to 13 of the goals.
However, some of the Positive Peace factors are not strongly
covered by the SDGs. In particular, Low Levels of Corruption is
only covered by one goal; Goal 16. This is highly relevant as
there is a statistically significant relationship between peace and
corruption.2 The Positive Peace factor of free flow of information
is also not significantly addressed by the SDGs.
As well as Positive Peace factors, there is also limited focus in
the SDGs on violence and conflict, which is only covered by Goal
16. As seen earlier, limiting conflict and violence is essential for
other development goals to be met. However, Goal 16 only
includes a subset of the spectrum of violence that can occur. The
GPI, for example, uses 23 indicators to measure violence and
the fear of violence.
The GPI is comprised of three domains: ongoing domestic and
international conflict; societal safety and security; and
militarisation. Goal 16 is focused only on the first two of these
domains and ignores militarisation entirely. The only target which
includes any reference to weaponry or militarisation is target 16.4
which in part relates to small arms. There are also gaps in societal
safety which are included in the GPI but not in Goal 16. This
includes measures of the impact of terrorism, violent
demonstrations, levels of political instability and political terror.

80

MEASURING THE OFFICIAL GOAL 16


INDICATORS
This section presents an audit of existing data that could be
used to measure Goal 16. Two aspects are important in
measuring Goal 16: the length of time required to capture
relevant data; and the lack of statistical capacity in many
countries, particularly in fragile or conflict affected countries.
Increasing data capacity is particularly important for Goal 16. The
least peaceful countries have among the lowest statistical capacity.
The Statistical Capacity Indicator by the World Bank measures the
capacity of a countrys national statistical system using 25
individual indicators. There is a moderate correlation of -0.37
between statistical capacity and the GPI. The correlation between
statistical capacity and peace is likely to be even stronger except the
World Bank do not provide a score for many countries that have
high statistical capacity. These countries are generally the most
peaceful: 18 of the 20 most peaceful countries do not have a score.
Given the experience of the MDGs where data was not captured for
all countries for every goal even when the goals had concluded, a
greater effort on building the statistical capacities of countries must
be an essential component of the SDGs. In measuring Goal 16
significant resources will need to be invested particularly in less
peaceful countries that have reduced statistical capacity.
The results of the audit of available data for measuring Goal 16
shows that there is data available with some coverage of the targets.
This audit uses a rating system measuring the coverage,
disaggregation and suitability of available data to fit the purpose of
the indicators. It was found that there are suitable measures for all
indicators. Nevertheless, only two indicators could currently be
measured to the full scope and required disaggregation.

High capacity

Countries that are more peaceful generally have greater statistical capacity.

STATISTICAL CAPACITY SCORE

Limiting conflict and


violence is essential for
other development
goals to be met.

FIGURE 5.5 STATISTICAL CAPACITY INDICATOR VS INTERNAL GPI SCORE

Low capacity

Of the 23 indicators to be measured, only


two were rated as fully disaggregated.
Thirteen indicators can be measured
immediately but require further
disaggregation or coverage. A close
measure is available for seven indicators.
This means new data will still need to be
developed, but there are data available for
short term estimations of progress in
these targets.

100
90

r=-0.37

80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

3.0

3.5

4.0

4.5

INTERNAL GPI

More peaceful

5.0

Less peaceful

Source: World Bank, IEP

TABLE 5.2 RESULTS OF AUDIT OF GOAL 16


GRADES

Can be measured immediately, fully disaggregated as required by the indicator

Can be measured immediately, requires further disaggregation or coverage

A close measure is available

Only proxy measures are available

No suitable measure exists

TARGET

TARGET

INDICATOR NUMBER

16.1

Significantly reduce all forms of violence and related death rates everywhere

16.2

End abuse, exploitation, trafficking and all forms of violence against and torture of children

16.3

Promote the rule of law at the national and international levels and ensure equal access to
justice for all

16.4

By 2030, significantly reduce illicit financial and arms flows, strengthen the recovery and return
of stolen assets and combat all forms of organized crime

16.5

Substantially reduce corruption and bribery in all their forms

16.6

Develop effective, accountable and transparent institutions at all levels

16.7

Ensure responsive, inclusive, participatory and representative decision-making at all levels

16.8

Broaden and strengthen the participation of developing countries in the institutions of global
governance

16.9

By 2030, provide legal identity for all, including birth registration

16.10

Ensure public access to information and protect fundamental freedoms, in accordance with
national legislation and international agreements

16.a

Strengthen relevant national institutions, including through international cooperation, for


building capacity at all levels, in particular in developing countries, to prevent violence and
combat terrorism and crime

16.b

Promote and enforce non-discriminatory laws and policies for sustainable development

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Sustainable Development Goal 16

81

TARGET 16.1: REDUCE ALL FORMS OF VIOLENCE


The first target of Goal 16 is the most measurable and can be
directly measured by the Global Peace Index. The goal is to
significantly reduce all forms of violence and related death
rates everywhere and can be measured through four
indicators.
16.1.1 Number of victims of intentional homicide per 100,000
population, by sex and age
Intentional homicide is broadly measured at national and
international levels and is one of the most direct measures of
violence. As such it is included as an indicator in the GPI as a
measure of internal violence. Globally, homicides kill many more
people than other forms of violence. For example, 13 times as many
people are killed globally by homicides than die in terrorist attacks.
At least 437,000 people were victims of homicide in 2015.
Most countries already have the internal capacity to record
homicides as it is a component of criminal justice systems.
Countries report their homicide statistics to the UNODC which
then makes the data available in one dataset. The UNODC
shows data disaggregated on sex for all but four out of the 193
UN member states. Fewer countries have disaggregation for age
groups which will require further record keeping.
There may be some complications that emerge from specific
legal contexts as to what is considered international homicide.
For example, the International Classification of Crime for
Statistical Purposes includes in its definition of intentional
homicide killings caused by excessive force by law enforcement.
Not all countries record deaths by law enforcement. There are
also problems with keeping the data up to date, 61 per cent of
countries with intentional homicide reported to the UNODC
have 2010 as the most recent year of data.
16.1.2 Conflict-related deaths per 100,000 population
(disaggregated by age group, sex and cause)
There are several measures of battle-related and conflict deaths.
In the GPI the data sources include Uppsala Conflict Data
Program (UCDP) and International Institute for Strategic
Studies (IISS) Armed Conflict Database (ACD), both are
external sources which provide estimates on deaths from armed
conflicts. There is no current data source which has conflict
deaths disaggregated by age group and sex.
By definition, conflict-related deaths occur in countries that
have either armed conflict or war within their borders. Conflict
generally reduces the capabilities of a government and requires
resources to be channelled into conflict prevention. As such,
countries which are post-conflict also have lesser statistical
capacity. All of the 31 member states of the UN that are
considered fragile or conflict affected have among the lowest
performance for statistical capacity in the world. There are also
limits on how accurate data captured in a conflict can be. As an
example of this, estimates for the number of deaths from the
duration of the Syrian civil war include 200,000 by the
Violations Documentation Center3, 250,0004 by the United
Nations and 320,000 Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.5

82

16.1.3 Percentage of the population subjected to physical,


psychological or sexual violence in the previous 12 months
Official figures of reported crimes often need to be adjusted for
under-reporting, with actual rates much higher. In many cases
official figures are under-reported, such as in Mexico where only
ten per cent of extortions are reported.
Physical, psychological and sexual violence would be criminal or
civil offenses in the majority of countries. However, the
indicator is a measure of the proportion of the population who
have been victims of these types of violence in the last 12
months, rather than the number of convictions for criminal or
civil claims. Accordingly, a better way to accurately measure this
indicator is through victimisation surveys. The United Nations
Interregional Crime and Justice Research Institute (UNICRI)
helps conduct the International Crime Victims Survey which
could be expanded from the 18 European countries measured in
the European Crime and Safety Survey to cover all countries.
There is currently one very limited relevant data point from the
Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) Program: the
percentage of women who experienced sexual violence in past
12 months. This indicator is limited to sexual violence against
women and was asked in only 34 countries. The majority of this
data is not timely either, with nearly three quarters of countries
having no earlier data point than 2012. Countries which have
measures of sexual violence against women in the past 12
months, as recorded by the DHS also perform poorly in the GPI.
Around two-thirds of the countries that have a measure of
sexual violence against women perform in the bottom half of the
GPI. This indicator will require expanded victimisation
surveying before it can be fully measured.
16.1.4 Proportion of people that feel safe walking alone around
the area they live
The Gallup World Poll asks in 164 countries: Do you feel safe
walking alone at night in the city or area where you live? This
indicator is a direct measure of the fear of violence. Perceptions of
safety is a proxy for peace in society in general. This is apparent in
figure 5.6 which shows a correlation between people who feel safe
walking alone and the levels of internal peace in a country.
As this indicator is survey based it can be disaggregated by age
and sex. It is important to disaggregate perceptions of fear as
there could be segments of the country which disproportionately
feel fear. In 2015, across the world, females and the young felt
more fear than the global average. There were 39 per cent of
females who were fearful of walking alone which is similar to 37
per cent of those aged 15-29 years old. In contrast, 28 per cent
of males felt fear from walking alone. This demonstrates that
males disproportionately feel safer. Disaggregation is necessary
in order to inform policy as it demonstrates which segments of
the population are more vulnerable.

FIGURE 5.6 2016 INTERNAL GPI VS PERCENTAGE OF PEOPLE WHO FEEL SAFE
WALKING ALONE

More safe

Countries that are more peaceful internally have a higher proportion of people
who feel safe walking alone.
100%

r=-0.4

90%

FEEL SAFE WALKING ALONE

80%
70%
60%
50%
40%
30%

Less safe

20%
10%
0%
1.0

1.5

2.0

More peaceful

2.5

3.0

3.5

4.0

INTERNAL GPI

4.5

5.0

Less peaceful

Source: Gallup, IEP

Most countries already have the internal


capacity to record homicides, as it is a
component of criminal justice systems.

MEASURING TARGET 16.1

There are two of the four indicators which can be measured in Target
16.1 in their current state, however, there are some gaps and
disaggregation could be improved. The only disaggregated indicator
is perceptions of safety walking alone at night which is based on a
survey, but only covers 156 of the 193 UN member states.
Nevertheless, three out of the four indicators in their current
state are close to measuring what is required. The only
exception being Indicator 16.1.3 which measures physical,
psychological or sexual violence in the last 12 months.
Using the available data, a simple index measuring performance
for Target 16.1 can be developed. Table 5.3 shows the ten worst
countries for Target 16.1, which include three countries that
were in conflict in 2014. Whilst this is a very limited measure as
the data is incomplete, it does show that there are several
countries that have high homicides and relatively few people
who feel safe walking alone. There is also a connection between
the countries that perform the worst in Target 16.1 and those
that perform poorly in the GPI. Seven out of the ten worst
ranked countries across Target 16.1 are in the worst performing
quadrant of internal measures of peace.

TABLE 5.3 TEN WORST RANKED COUNTRIES ACROSS


TARGET 16.1
TARGET 16.1
INDICATOR
RANK

COUNTRY

16.1.1

16.1.2

16.1.3

16.1.4

HOMICIDE
RATE

BATTLE
DEATHS

SEXUAL
VIOLENCE

SAFE
WALKING

193

Syria

66,649

no data

32%

192

Venezuela

54

no data

14%

191

Honduras

84

3%

48%

190

Democratic
Republic of
the Congo

13

978

16%

43%

189

Colombia

32

113

12%

47%

188

El Salvador

40

no data

36%

187

Lesotho

38

no data

38%

186

Uganda

11

17%

55%

185

Belize

45

no data

50%

184

South Africa

32

no data

40%

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Sustainable Development Goal 16

83

There is also a trend between the


measure of Target 16.1 and internal peace
from the GPI. However, this should not
be surprising as internal peace includes
two of the same indicators.

FIGURE 5.7
AVAILABLE INDICATORS THAT CAN MEASURE TARGET 16.1 VS INTERNAL GPI SCORE

Worse

There is a trend with performance in Target 16.1 and peacefulness in a country.

60%

40%
r=0.47
30%

20%

10%
Better

Sexual violence is the


only indicator for
Target 16.1 that
cannot currently be
adequately
measured.

TARGET 16.1 SCORE

50%

0%
1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

3.0

INTERNAL GPI

More peaceful

3.5

4.0

4.5

5.0

Less peaceful

Source: UNODC, UCDP, Gallup, DHS. IEP Calculations

TARGET 16.2: END ABUSE AND VIOLENCE TOWARDS


CHILDREN
The second target of Goal 16 is to end abuse, exploitation,
trafficking and all forms of violence against and torture of
children. This is particularly difficult to fully measure based on the
existing stock of data. All forms of trafficking, exploitation and
crimes against children are underreported for a range of reasons.
16.2.1 Percentage of children aged 1-17 who experienced any
physical punishment and/or psychological aggression by
caregivers in the past month
UNICEF has figures for violent discipline of children aged 2-14.
This data is disaggregated by physical punishment and
psychological aggression, as well as sex, whether victims live in an
urban or rural environment and the household wealth quintile.
The data is available for 60 of the 193 UN member states and is
based on Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS), Multiple
Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS) and other nationally
representative surveys. This data relies on answers from the
primary caregivers or any adult household member. There may be
problems regarding the accuracy of data as the surveys require
caregivers to self-report instances of violence which means there is
likely to be a very high underreporting rate. As an attempt to verify
the data, it could be compared to the reports of total sexual offences
against children by the UNODC. This is a measure of the number
of police-recorded offences at the national level. There are also
global figures of violence against children compiled by UNICEF
from 190 countries. Although there is the need for current
measures to also include children aged one and 15-17 as well as an
increase in coverage to include all countries, there are data
currently available to measure this indicator or proxy indicators.

84

16.2.2 Number of victims of human trafficking per 100,000


population, by sex, age group and form of exploitation
As with violence against children by caregivers, it is very difficult to
have accurate numbers for victims of trafficking, however there are
some measures that can be used. The UNODC collects information
on the number of detected victims of human trafficking and has
expertise in measuring hidden populations. The U.S. Department
of State also releases a Trafficking in Persons Report which records
governmental anti-trafficking initiatives.6 The Slavery Index by the
Walk Free Foundation provides estimates on trafficked people all
around the world and was selected by this audit purely because of
the extended coverage it offered. A consolidated effort to have
accurate and disaggregated data that goes beyond like-country
estimates for all countries of the number of victims of human
trafficking will require significant resources. This is not the only
measure of slavery in the SDGs. Target 5.2 and Target 8.7 both
include the elimination of trafficking.
16.2.3 Proportion of young women and men aged 18-29 who
experienced sexual violence by age 18
Currently the Demographic and Health Surveys includes a
question relating to sexual violence for women before the age of
18. However, the coverage is limited to only 34 countries and the
records are slightly dated with only two inclusions from 2014.
Furthermore, it does not cover men. However, the majority of the
countries covered by this question have relatively low peace and
lesser statistical capacities. This suggests that a similar survey
could be undertaken and broadened to measure this indicator.

TARGET 16.3: PROMOTE THE RULE OF LAW


The third target is to promote the rule of law at the national
and international levels and ensure equal access to justice
for all. This target is most related to the Positive Peace measure
of well-functioning government and to a lesser extent the
acceptance of the rights of others. A well-functioning
government delivers high-quality public and civil services,
creates trust and participation, demonstrates political stability
and upholds the rule of law.
There are two indicators to measure the promotion of the rule
of law for Goal 16. The first is the crime reporting rate. If there
are a large number of crimes that are not reported to
authorities, it can reflect either a lack of trust in the system or
little perceived concern for that particular crime.
16.3.1 Proportion of victims of violence in the previous 12 months
who reported their victimization to competent authorities or other
officially recognized conflict resolution mechanisms
This indicator seeks to measure the proportion of victims of
violence who had reported being victims. This reporting
involves having interactions with police and the judicial system
as well as other dispute resolution institutions recognised by the
state such as traditional or community justice systems. This
data is from victimisation surveys which, according to a review
by UNODC, have been implemented by at least 72 countries
since 2009. The majority of victimisation surveys have been
undertaken by National Statistical Offices. IEP has attempted to
compile these various surveys to determine international rates.
This includes from L Institut National des Hautes tudes de la
Scurit et de la Justice (INHESJ), Ministerio de Justicia y
Derechos Humanos (MJDH) and other national offices.
There are difficulties in comparing underreporting rates from
different countries. Different rates could reflect cultural
differences as well as a lack of trust in authorities. This includes
a different understanding of what behaviour constitutes a crime
or whether there is a culture of not reporting grievances. For
example, a slap by an older female to her adult son would not be
considered grounds for assault in many countries. Another
example is corporal punishment. Although Article 19.1 of the
Convention on the Rights of the Child prevents corporal
punishment, in some countries it is not considered a crime. If
asked, a victim of corporal punishment may not consider they
have been the victim of violence but rather see it as a normal
and acceptable means of discipline.
There are also potential reporting concerns if victims are subjected
to violence perpetrated by the state: there may not be accurate
reporting if a state entity is undertaking surveys. In order to better
direct policy there is also a requirement for disaggregation of the
results of victimisation surveys by sex, age, type of crime and
potentially the ethnicity and citizenship of the victim.

16.3.2 Unsentenced detainees as a percentage of overall prison


population
Measures of the proportion of unsentenced detainees are
indicative of the efficiency of the justice system. Countries which
have smaller GDPs per capita and smaller government budgets
tend to have fewer people incarcerated or in pre-trial detention.
Nevertheless, countries that have high levels of unsentenced
prisoners are delaying the carriage of justice. There are certain
circumstances whereby pre-trial detention is appropriate,
including the risk of absconding or to prevent further crimes.
But when pre-trial detention is disproportionately used it
reflects a weakness in the judicial system.
The UNODC has measures of unsentenced detention in 114
countries. This data is disaggregated for counts of those in
detention by sex, whether they are adults and juveniles, and
citizens and foreign citizens. The World Prison Brief by the
Institute for Criminal Policy Research also records pre-trial
detention in 184 countries. This data is not disaggregated.
Compared to many of the indicators for the SDGs, this indicator
is relatively well covered. Of the countries covered by the
UNODC, 96 per cent have more than one year of data allowing
for analysis on progress for the indicator.
TARGET 16.4: REDUCE ILLICIT FINANCIAL AND ARMS
FLOWS
Target four is to, by 2030, significantly reduce illicit financial
and arms flows, strengthen the recovery and return of stolen
assets and combat all forms of organized crime.
By definition, those engaged in illicit financial or arms flows will
not want their activity known. As such, there will be great
difficulties in creating a measure that is direct and meaningful
for this target.
16.4.1 Total value of inward and outward illicit financial flows
(in current United States dollars)
Illicit financial flows reduce the potential revenue for a country
and undermines governance. There may also be an impact on
economic growth as funds are channelled outside a country.
Furthermore, there may also be security issues which arise as
funds can be used to expand illegal enterprises such as drugs,
rebellions or arm cartels.
There are no current effective measures of inward and outward
flows with cash transactions particularly covered by current
methodologies. The Addis Ababa Action Agenda shows the
international community is seeking greater data on illicit
financial flows. It is also possible that with the release of the
so-called Panama Papers, which documented details of offshore
companies that in some cases were seeking tax minimisation
strategies, there will be a push towards greater measurement of
financial flows.
A measure which could potentially be used in the interim is the
International Finance Corporation (IFC) indicator of illicit
financial flows for 145 relevant countries. Whilst this measure is
an estimate and cannot show the granularity required by the
indicator, it does allow for prioritisation of efforts. According to

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Sustainable Development Goal 16

85

FIGURE 5.8
TEN COUNTRIES WITH THE HIGHEST PER CAPITA ILLICIT FINANCIAL FLOWS
Ten countries with the highest illicit financial flows per capita are outside the largest economies in the world.

0.7

US$ CENTS PER CAPITA

0.6

0.5

0.4

0.3

0.2

0.1

0.0

Bahamas

Equatorial
Guinea

Brunei

Trinidad
and Tobago

Costa Rica

Qatar

Oman

Suriname

Malaysia

Azerbaijan

Source: IFC, IEP calculations

the IFC, of the over US$1 trillion in illicit financial flows in


2013, over half was from five countries. These five countries are
China, Russia, India, Mexico and Malaysia. With the exception
of Malaysia, these countries are all in the 20 largest economies
in the world.

These figures can also be broken down on a per capita basis. As


figure 5.8 shows, the countries with the highest illicit financial
flows per capita are not the biggest economies in the world.

FIGURE 5.9 ADOPTION OF ARMS TRADE TREATY AND SCORE FOR EASE OF ACCESS TO SMALL ARMS
AND LIGHT WEAPONS
Over three quarters of UN member states have signed or ratified the Arms Trade Treaty. However, of the
countries that are not parties to the treaty, 80 per cent score in the worst three bands for the ease of access
to small arms and light weapons indicator in the GPI.
90
80

NUMBER OF COUNTRIES

70
Very limited access

60
Very easy access

50

Limited access

40
30
20
Easy access

10
0

Ratified

Source: UNODA, IEP

86

Signatories

Not party to treaty

Moderate access

TARGET 16.5: REDUCE CORRUPTION AND BRIBERY

16.4.2 Proportion of seized small arms and light weapons that


are recorded and traced, in accordance with international
standards and legal instruments

The fifth target for Goal 16 is to substantially reduce corruption


and bribery in all their forms. IEP has previously found there is
a relationship between peace and corruption.8 It was found that
there is a level of corruption which correlates with a significant
reduction in peace. If a country has low levels of corruption, then
increases in corruption will have little effect on peace. However,
once a certain threshold is reached then small increases in
corruption can result in large decreases in peace.

There is no current measure of this indicator. There will be


inherent difficulties in measuring the percentage of seized small
arms and light weapons that are recorded and traced in
compliance with international standards and laws. A proxy for the
likelihood of compliance to international standards is the measure
of the Arms Trade Treaty.

16.5.1 Proportion of persons who had at least one contact with a


public official, who paid a bribe to a public official, or were asked
for a bribe by these public officials, in the previous 12 months,
disaggregated by age group, sex, region and population group

There are 62 countries that are not parties to the Arms Trade
Treaty. Of these countries, 80 per cent score in the bottom three
bands for the ease of access to small arms and light weapons
indicator in the GPI. This shows that they have moderate to
very easy access to small arms. It is likely that in countries with
easy access to small arms there would be a higher proportion of
seized weapons that are not recorded and traced in accordance
with international standards. This is even more likely in
countries that are not even parties to these international
standards. The Arms Trade Treaty-Baseline Assessment Project
(ATT-BAP), an initiative that provides guidance on the
obligations of states under the Arms Trade Treaty, could be an
important framework for measuring this indicator.7 The UN
Office for Disarmament Affairs (UNODA) currently promotes
disarmament efforts and records the relationship between states
and the Arms Trade Treaty.

There are multiple measures of corruption which rely on survey


data. The Global Corruption Barometer 2013 by Transparency
International asked people in 91 countries if they had paid a
bribe to any one of eight services listed in the past 12 months.
This included Education, Judiciary, Medical and Health, Police,
Registry and Permit Services, Utilities, Tax Revenue and/or
Customs and Land Services. From this data IEP calculated a
measure of the percentage of the population that paid a bribe in
the last 12 months to a government service. It correlates at a
statistically significant level with internal peace.
16.5.2 Proportion of businesses who had at least one contact with
a public official and who paid a bribe to a public official, or were
asked for a bribe by these public officials, during the previous 12
months

Countries with high levels of illicit financial flows and easy


access to small arms and light weapons should be prioritised
even in the absence of reliable data.

Bribery does not just affect private citizens and public officials.
Businesses incur additional costs if they are required to pay
bribes as well. The World Bank has estimated that over US$1

FIGURE 5.10 CORRUPTION VS 2016 INTERNAL GPI


Lower corruption correlates with greater internal peace.

Better

BRIBE PAID IN LAST 12 MONTHS

Worse

60%

50%

40%

r = 0.54

30%

20%

10%

0%

1.0

1.5

2.0

More peaceful

2.5

3.0

INTERNAL GPI

3.5

4.0

4.5
Less peaceful

5.0

If a country has low


levels of corruption,
then increases in
corruption will have
little effect on peace.
However, once a
certain threshold is
reached, small
increases in corruption
can result in large
decreases in peace.

Source: Transparency International, IEP

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Sustainable Development Goal 16

87

trillion is paid in bribes each year. As with all forms of


corruption, there is incomplete data as much corruption is
hidden. A survey of relevant businesses will be required to
determine the prevalence and rates of bribery between
businesses and public officials in a given year. The World Bank
Enterprise Surveys asks more than 130,000 manufacturing and
services firms in 135 countries if unofficial payments or gifts are
required to do business. This includes a measure of the
percentage of firms experiencing at least one bribe payment
request. Bribery in businesses significantly correlates at with
bribery by individuals with an r value of 0.6
TARGET 16.6: DEVELOP TRANSPARENT INSTITUTIONS
Target six is to develop effective, accountable and transparent
institutions at all levels. The two indicators which are designed
to measure this target focus on financial accountability as well as
reporting of satisfaction with public services.
16.6.1 Primary government expenditures as a percentage of
original approved budget, disaggregated by sector (or by budget
codes or similar)
This measures the capacity of the state to budget and can act as
an indicator of transparency. The Public Expenditure and
Financial Accountability Program have a measure of aggregate
expenditure compared to original approved budget. This program
is a partnership between the World Bank, the European
Commission and various other national bodies or governments.
The countries that score the worst on this measure also have a
history of conflicts. Of the ten countries that had the worst score
for this measure, seven of the countries are conflict or postconflict countries. These countries are Central African Republic,
Liberia, Madagascar, South Sudan, Yemen, Timor-Leste and
Zimbabwe. This demonstrates that governments which have been
in conflict have reduced capacity to provide effective and
transparent institutions. It further shows that post-conflict
countries need to be prioritised in the SDGs.
FIGURE 5.11
CHOICE IN ELECTIONS VS GOVERNMENT TYPE
Countries that are more democratic have higher levels of
belief that genuine choice is offered in elections.

POPULATION WHO BELIEVE VOTERS HAVE


GENUINE CHOICE IN ELECTIONS

70%
60%

TARGET 16.7: ENSURE PARTICIPATORY DECISIONMAKING


Target seven is to ensure responsive, inclusive, participatory
and representative decision-making at all levels. A core
component of development includes participation in the
decisions which have an impact on an individual or groups life
and wellbeing.9 Participation also underpins several of the
Positive Peace factors. Part of the necessity for free flow of
information is to have a free media and access to information,
so as to inform participation in the political process. Inclusive
and participatory government and public services are also
necessary to ensure the acceptance of the rights of others.
16.7.1 Proportions of positions (by age group, sex, persons with
disabilities and population groups) in public institutions
(national and local legislatures, public service, and judiciary)
compared to national distributions
This indicator is a measure of demographic cohort representation
in public institutions. It is a proxy for participation on the
assumption that if diversity in public institutions reflects national
distributions of diversity then minority groups will be better
represented. Whilst it is an incomplete measure, as countries that
have the highest representation of women in parliament are not
necessarily more peaceful or free, it does connect to legitimacy. The
World Bank, along with UN Women and the Inter-Parliamentary
Union, measure the proportion of women in parliament. There is
also information about labour distribution by the International
Labour Organisation but needs to be more finely disaggregated to
satisfy the goal.

This indicator is perception based, asking for the belief of


inclusive and responsive decision making across the population.
Value based surveys will be the most appropriate way to
measure. An available proxy for this indicator is included in the
World Values Survey which asks if voters are offered a genuine
choice in the elections. This was asked in 39 countries. There is
a relationship between democracy and the belief that genuine
choice is offered in elections, with the EIU Democracy Index
correlating at 0.47 with the World Values Survey measure.10

50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0
FLAWED
DEMOCRACY

HYBRID
REGIME

GOVERNMENT TYPE
Source: World Values Survey, EIU, IEP Calculations

88

There are various perception surveys of satisfaction with


national governments, including the Barometer surveys, Gallup
and World Values Survey. Further disaggregation of questions
will enable understanding about satisfaction levels in different
parts of a country related to specific services. The most
comprehensive single source of data that currently exists to
measure this indicator is the Gallup World Poll. The Gallup
World Poll asked people in 138 countries whether they have
confidence in the national government.

16.7.2 Proportion of population who believe decision-making is


inclusive and responsive, by sex, age, disability and
population group

80%

FULL
DEMOCRACY

16.6.2 Proportion of the population satisfied with their last


experience of public services

AUTHORITARIAN
REGIME

TARGET 16.8: BROADEN PARTICIPATION IN GLOBAL


GOVERNANCE

16.9.1 Percentage of children under 5 whose births have been


registered with a civil authority, by age

Target eight is to broaden and strengthen the participation of


developing countries in the institutions of global
governance. Although the SDGs are meant to apply to all
countries, this target explicitly refers to developing countries.
The participation and representation of developing countries is
often not in accordance with the size of their economies or
population. This measure could be recorded immediately as all
it requires is a calculation of the level and significance of
developing countries involvement in institutions. This includes
regional bodies and trade agreements as well as international
institutions and international governance structures.

Birth registration is a proxy for legal representation.


Registration of children is the first step for recognising their
rights under the law. Furthermore, registration helps ensure
that children are counted and can access the services of the
state. It is essential for government planning for education,
health and social services to have accurate demographic
information to cope with current and future service demands.

16.8.1 Percentage of members and voting rights of developing


countries in international organizations
This indicator is currently not measured. In order to be
measured it will require a decision on which institutions to
include. This is one of the few indicators in Goal 16 that could
be measured immediately; it does not require any input from
NSOs as country membership of multi-lateral organisations is
available. This indicator, when developed, could be further
analysed by population size or share of global GDP.
TARGET 16.9: LEGAL IDENTITY FOR ALL
The ninth target is to, by 2030, provide legal identity for all,
including birth registration.

UNICEF maintains global databases for a number of child


protection indicators, as well as some regional databases such as
the TransMONEE. The main sources of data include nationally
representative household surveys, such as Multiple Indicator
Cluster Surveys (MICS), Demographic and Health Surveys
(DHS), Reproduction Health Surveys (RHS) and AIDS
Indicator Surveys (AIS), as well as vital registration systems.
The measure is of the percentage of children under age five
whose births are registered. It is disaggregated by sex, place of
residence and household wealth quintile.
There is a moderately statistically significant relationship
between countries that have low statistical capacity and lower
proportional levels of birth registration. This suggests that
countries that have high statistical capacity also have the
institutions in place to provide registration. The effect of this is
that statistical capacity will need to be strengthened in the

FIGURE 5.12 PROPORTION OF BIRTH REGISTRATIONS FOR CHILDREN UNDER FIVE VS STATISTICAL CAPACITY SCORE
Countries that have lesser statistical capacity also are less likely to have proportionately high levels of birth registrations for
children under five.
100%

More

90%
80%

BIRTH REGISTRATIONS

70%

r = 0.4
60%
50%
40%
30%

Less

20%
10%
0%
0

10

20

Low capacity

30

40

50

60

STATISTICAL CAPACITY SCORE

70

80

90

100

High capacity

Source: UNICEF, World Bank

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Sustainable Development Goal 16

89

countries that are not registering all births. Birth registration


could also be viewed as a proxy for statistical capacity.
TARGET 16.10: ENSURE PUBLIC ACCESS TO
INFORMATION
The tenth target is to ensure public access to information and
protect fundamental freedoms, in accordance with national
legislation and international agreements. This target is very
similar to the Positive Peace measures of free flow of
information and acceptance of the rights of others. However,
unlike free flow of information which includes measures of
access to information through internet and mobile phone
access, the measure for this target focuses on public access to
information as well as the media, trade unionists and human
rights advocates.
16.10.1 Number of verified cases of killing, kidnapping, enforced
disappearance, arbitrary detention and torture of journalists,
associated media personnel, trade unionists and human rights
advocates in the previous 12 months.
The measure chosen to address target ten focuses on
harassment and punishment of journalists as well as civil
advocates. This is a proxy for the freedom of the media, which in
of itself is a proxy for freedom of expression and information. As
the indicator includes not only journalists but also media
personnel, trade unionists and human rights advocates.
The Committee to Protect Journalists records instances of
deaths of journalists around the world. Whilst this is an
incomplete measure that does not include kidnapping,
disappearances, arbitrary detention or torture it is a good proxy
to these. The trend of deaths of journalists follows the pattern of

FIGURE 5.13 ACCREDIATION STATUS OF NATIONAL


HUMAN RIGHTS INSTITUTIONS IN ALL UN MEMBER STATES
Nearly half of UN member states do not have accredited
National Human Rights Institutions.

Full Compliance
37%
Not Accredited
45%

Not Full
Compliance
13%
Non-Compliance
5%

Source: ICC, OHCHR

90

conflicts that have occurred. In the mid 1990s there were many
conflicts, as well as deaths of journalists. Both conflicts and
deaths started to increase again in around 2007.
Civil workers such as trade unionists and human rights activists
could be measured by the International Trade Union Confederation
who publish the Global Rights Index.11 Indicators used to create this
Index include the number of trade unionists who are arrested,
detained, imprisoned, charged or fined around the world as well as
violations of rights of membership and meetings.
Nearly half of all deaths of journalists in 2015 occurred in
conflict countries. The countries that had the most deaths that
were not in conflict have high levels of organised crime. This
includes Brazil and Mexico. Furthermore, there is a correlation
between journalist deaths and battle deaths for 193 countries at
0.67 which is statistically significant.
There is a World Press Freedom Index by Reporters Without
Borders which moderately correlates with battle deaths. This
measure also correlates with internal peace, highlighting that
countries with low levels of peace are more dangerous are also
more dangerous to journalists.
16.10.2 Number of countries that adopt and implement
constitutional, statutory and/or policy guarantees for public
access to information
It is likely that UNESCO will continue collecting data relevant
to this indicator through the Media Development Indicators
which cover 195 countries. This includes measures of the legal
and policy framework, regulatory systems for broadcasting and
defamation and censorship laws within a country. Other third
party measures can be used whilst statistical capacity is being
developed. One such example is the World Press Freedom Index
developed by Reporters Without Borders which includes
measures of the legislative framework governing news and
information activities. The UNESCO Institute for Statistics has
data for judicial processes relating to accessing information held
by the state for 56 countries. The organisation Freedom Info
also records whether countries have freedom of information
legislation. There appears to be a relationship with peace and
public access to information: 19 of the 20 most peaceful
countries have freedom of information legislation compared to
only eight of the 20 least peaceful countries.
TARGET 16.A: STRENGTHEN INSTITUTIONS TO PREVENT
VIOLENCE
Target 16.a seeks to strengthen relevant national institutions,
including through international cooperation, for building
capacity at all levels, in particular in developing countries,
to prevent violence and combat terrorism and crime.
16.a.1 Existence of independent national human rights
institutions in compliance with the Paris PrinciplesPercentage
of victims who report physical and/or sexual crime to law
enforcement agencies in the previous 12 months, disaggregated
by age group, sex, region and population group
The Paris Principles were adopted by the UN in 1993 and
establish norms for the functioning of National Human Rights

Institutions which promote and protect human rights in


different countries. This indicator records whether countries
have National Human Rights Institutions which comply with
these principals, which includeing the independence to monitor
and report issues to government. This is not a measure of the
status of human rights in a country, rather the legal status and
governance rules of National Human Rights Institutions.
Both the most and least peaceful country in the 2016 GPI have
not received accreditation. Similarly, Switzerland is in the top
ten for the GPI and is considered non-compliant whereas
Afghanistan, ranked 160, is fully compliant. Compliance with
the Paris Principles is determined by a subcommittee of the
International Coordinating Committee (ICC) for National
Human Rights Institutions and compiled by the Office of the
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
(OHCHR). Whilst most National Human Rights Institutions
that have been accredited have been found as compliant, 45 per
cent of UN member states have not been accredited. As such, 63
per cent of UN member states are either not in compliance with
the Paris Principles or have not received accreditation.
TARGET 16.B: PROMOTE NON-DISCRIMINATORY LAWS
Target 16.b is to promote and enforce non-discriminatory
laws and policies for sustainable development.
16.b.1 Percentage of the population reporting having personally felt
discriminated against or harassed in the previous 12 months on the
basis of a ground of discrimination prohibited under international
human rights law
The indicator could be measured in the short term by proxy
measurements. An available proxy includes the World Values Survey
which asks whether people approve of the human rights movement.

METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES WITH GOAL 16


IEPs methodology as set out in this section of the report is a best
effort to measure the official indicators for Goal 16 using available
data. However, in doing so, several methodological issues
surrounding Goal 16 have emerged. Many of these issues will need
to be addressed.
AVAILABILITY
Although many of the goals can be measured to some degree,
there are many indicators that are not currently being measured
or are only partially measured. Some of the data measured may
not be relevant to the indicator or may not be disaggregated at
the level necessary. An example of this is indicator 16.2.3 which
measures the percentage of young men and women who
experienced sexual violence by age 18. The only data relevant
and internationally comparable data on this is limited to 34
countries and only includes women.
As table 5.4 highlights, there is little data which is available across
all of the 193 countries, which is relevant to the indicator selected
and has the required level of disaggregation. This does not mean
the data will be unavailable in the future. However, it does mean
that to fully measure Goal 16 will take some years at best. A
shortcoming of the MDGs was that the countries with the least
amount of data all required progress. As the SDGs for Goal 16
relies largely on data which has not yet been captured, the feedback
loop will take several years to develop. There are still opportunities
to prioritise using other data sources and proxy data.
FIT FOR PURPOSE
Not all of the Indicators in the official IAEG process adequately
cover the full ambition of the targets. Only three of the 12

Some form of independent analysis


is needed to establish the veracity of
official reporting.
TABLE 5.4 DATA AVAILABILITY, RELEVANCE TO THE INDICATOR AND LEVEL OF DISAGGREGATION REQUIRED
Green bars indicate data availability and whether the available data is relevant and disaggregated. Red means that the indicators are not fully
relevant to the target and data is not fully disaggregated.
TARGET

AVAILABILITY

RELEVANCE

DISAGGREGATED

16.1
16.2
16.3
16.4

N/A

16.5
16.6
16.7
16.8

Not counted

Not counted

Not counted

Not counted

Not counted

Not counted

16.9
16.10
16.a
16.b

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Sustainable Development Goal 16

91

targets are covered by all the indicators selected. That means


that for 75 per cent of the targets there will be a substandard
level of measurement. This includes incomplete measures such
as target 16.2 which does not measure violence against children
caused by people who are not caregivers. Another incomplete
measure is seen in target 16.5 which seeks a substantial
reduction in corruption and bribery in all their forms, but only
measures bribery between public officials and the public or
business. There are no measures of corruption other than
bribery or other forms of governmental corruption, such as
embezzlement.

TABLE 5.6 TARGET AND POTENTIAL REASONS WHY THE


STATE MAY BE PERCEIVED AS LESS OBJECTIVE

For three targets there are no indicators which measure any


aspect of the target. For example, target 16.4 seeks to combat all
forms of organised crime, but there is no indicator that
measures organised crime. The ways in which different targets
are not measured by the chosen indicators is seen in table 5.5.
PERCEPTION BASED DATA

TARGET

POTENTIAL CONFLICT OF INTEREST WITH STATE

16.1

Government could be party in conflict

16.2

16.3

Assessment of Government efficacy

16.4

Illicit financial flows may involve some Government officials

16.5

Corruption may involve government elites

16.6

Assessment of Government efficacy

16.7

Assessment of Government inclusiveness

16.8

16.9

Government may be excluding particular groups

16.10

Government may be restricting access to information

16.a

Assessment of Government efficacy

16.b

Assessment of Government efficacy

If the government is the perpetrator of violence, then there will


be little perceived objectivity of data for many of the indicators.
For example, if a government is a party to a conflict then they will
be unsuitable to provide estimates of conflict deaths. Similarly, a
government may have implemented a policy of explicit
discrimination against particular groups. In such a circumstance,
government accounts of birth registration would likely be less
accurate. The presence of third parties who are responsible either
for data collection or validation of data will continue to be
necessary, even with further full involvement of NSOs.

There is an emphasis on the SDGs to build up local capacity


through NSOs for data collection. However, there will be
perception challenges relating to the objectivity and capacity of
many national offices. This necessarily means that some form of
independent analysis is needed to establish the veracity of
official reporting. Some of the targets which have high levels of
political sensitivity include functioning of government, levels of
violence and government initiated violence.
Table 5.6 lists potential reasons why some governments may not
be best placed as an objective supplier of data. Some of the
targets explicitly measure the efficacy of governments or activity
of the government. These include measures of corruption, the
targeting of journalists, trade unionists and human rights
advocates and the inclusiveness of government and its services.

TABLE 5.5 HOW EACH INDICATOR WILL MEASURE EACH TARGET AND NOTES ON COVERAGE GAPS

92

TARGET

WHAT IS NOT BEING MEASURED

16.1 Significantly reduce all forms of violence and related death rates
everywhere

16.2 End abuse, exploitation, trafficking and all forms of violence against and
torture of children

Only measuring violence against children caused by caregivers.

16.3 Promote the rule of law at the national and international levels and ensure
equal access to justice for all

Not measuring promotion of rule of law at international levels, not related to


access to justice.

16.4 By 2030, significantly reduce illicit financial and arms flows, strengthen the
recovery and return of stolen assets and combat all forms of organized crime

No indicator related to strengthening the recovery and return of stolen assets.


No indicator to measure organized crime.

16.5 Substantially reduce corruption and bribery in all their forms

No measures within or between governments.

16.6 Develop effective, accountable and transparent institutions at all levels

No measure of effectiveness of government. No focus on local governments.

16.7 Ensure responsive, inclusive, participatory and representative decisionmaking at all levels

Only measuring representative. No measure on responsiveness, inclusiveness


or participatory nature of government.

16.8 Broaden and strengthen the participation of developing countries in the


institutions of global governance

16.9 By 2030, provide legal identity for all, including birth registration

16.10 Ensure public access to information and protect fundamental freedoms,


in accordance with national legislation and international agreements

No measure of protection of fundamental freedoms or alignment with law.

16.a Strengthen relevant national institutions, including through international


cooperation, for building capacity at all levels, in particular in developing
countries, to prevent violence and combat terrorism and crime

Not a measure of the target.

16.b Promote and enforce non-discriminatory laws and policies for sustainable
development

No measure of enforcement.

PRACTICAL CONCERNS
Some of the targets in Goal 16 are multidimensional, measuring
a large concept. Just as the GPI uses 23 different indicators to
measure peace, there are certain concepts which cannot be
accurately measured by using only a few indicators. An example
of this is the rule of law. The United Nations Rule of Law
Indicators used 135 different indicators to measure the rule of
law in different countries.12 However, Goal 16.3, which relates to
the promotion of the rule of law at the national and

international levels, has two indicators to measure this. Neither


of the indicators are actual measures of the rule of law, but
rather proxies for the efficacy of government judicial services.
There is also a relationship between some of the indicators for
Goal 16 and internal peace. Table 5.7 shows the significant
correlations between indicators for Goal 16 and the internal
peace measure of the GPI.

TABLE 5.7 RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN INDICATORS FOR GOAL 16 AND INTERNAL PEACE
VARIABLE 1

VARIABLE 2

R VALUE

Battle Deaths (16.1.2)

Journalists Killed (16.10.1)

0.67

Sexual Violence Before Aged 18 (16.2.3)

Sexual Violence in the Past 12 Months (16.1.3)

0.67

Internal GPI

Reporters Without Borders (16.10.1)

0.56

Bribe in the last 12 Months (16.5.1)

Internal GPI

0.54

Internal GPI

Bribe in the last 12 Months (16.5.1)

0.54

Bribe in the last 12 Months (16.5.1)

Unsentenced Detainees (16.3.2)

0.42

Bribe in the last 12 Months (16.5.1)

Reporters Without Borders (16.10.1)

0.4

Internal GPI

Unsentenced Detainees (16.3.2)

0.39

Homicide (16.1.1)

Pretrial (16.3.2)

0.37

World Press Freedom Index (16.10.1)

Violent Crime Underreporting Rate (16.3.1)

0.37

Sexual Violence in the Past 12 Months (16.1.3)

Women in Parliament (16.7.1)

0.37

Battle Deaths (16.1.2)

Internal GPI

0.36

Internal GPI

Journalists Killed (16.10.1)

0.36

Bribe in the last 12 Months (16.5.1)

Government Budget (16.6.1)

0.36

Homicide (16.1.1)

Internal GPI

0.32

Bribe in the last 12 Months (16.5.1)

Confidence in Government (16.6.2)

0.32

Internal GPI

Slavery (16.2.2)

0.31

Journalists Killed (16.10.1)

Underreporting Rate (16.3.1)

0.31

Confidence in Government (16.6.2)

Safe Walking Alone (16.1.4)

0.26

Arms Treaty (16.4.2)

Birth Registration (16.9.1)

0.26

Birth Registration (16.9.1)

Safe Walking Alone (16.1.4)

0.25

Slavery (16.2.2)

Women in Parliament (16.7.1)

-0.25

Safe Walking Alone (16.1.4)

Unsentenced Detainees (16.3.2)

-0.32

Birth Registration (16.9.1)

Internal GPI

-0.33

Reporters Without Borders (16.10.1)

Youth Policy (16.7.2)

-0.34

Bribe in the last 12 Months (16.5.1)

Safe Walking Alone (16.1.4)

-0.35

Arms Treaty (16.4.2)

Internal GPI

-0.36

Sexual Offences Against Children (16.2.1)

Slavery (16.2.2)

-0.36

Battle Deaths (16.1.2)

Underreporting Rate (16.3.1)

-0.38

Internal GPI

Safe Walking Alone (16.1.4)

-0.4

Internal GPI

Sexual Offences Against Children (16.2.1)

-0.42

Bribe in the last 12 Months (16.5.1)

Sexual Offences Against Children (16.2.1)

-0.44

Reporters Without Borders (16.10.1)

Sexual Offences Against Children (16.2.1)

-0.45

Homicide (16.1.1)

Safe Walking Alone (16.1.4)

-0.47

Arms Treaty (16.4.2)

Reporters Without Borders (16.10.1)

-0.52

Birth Registration (16.9.1)

Sexual Violence in the Past 12 Months (16.1.3)

-0.54

Birth Registration (16.9.1)

Bribe in the last 12 Months (16.5.1)

-0.59

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Sustainable Development Goal 16

93

APPENDICES

APPENDIX A
GPI METHODOLOGY

Peace is notoriously difficult to define. The simplest way of approaching it


is in terms of the harmony achieved by the absence of violence or the fear
of violence, which has been described as Negative Peace. Negative Peace
is a compliment to Positive Peace which is defined as the attitudes,
institutions and structures which create and sustain peaceful societies.
The GPI was founded by Steve Killelea, an Australian
technology entrepreneur and philanthropist. It is produced by
the Institute for Economics and Peace, a global think tank
dedicated to building a greater understanding of the
relationship between economics, business and peace. The GPI
is collated and calculated by The Economist Intelligence Unit
(EIU), which has also contributed to some sections of this
report, including the regional analysis and the risers and
fallers.
The GPI measures a countrys level of Negative Peace using
three domains of peacefulness. The first domain, ongoing
domestic and international conflict, investigates the extent to
which countries are involved in internal and external
conflicts, as well as their role and duration of involvement in
conflicts.
The second domain evaluates the level of harmony or discord
within a nation; ten indicators broadly assess what might be
described as societal safety and security. The assertion is that
low crime rates, minimal terrorist activity and violent
demonstrations, harmonious relations with neighbouring
countries, a stable political scene and a small proportion of the
population being internally displaced or made refugees can be
equated with peacefulness.
Seven further indicators are related to a countrys militarisation
reflecting the link between a countrys level of military
build-up and access to weapons and its level of peacefulness,
both domestically and internationally. Comparable data on
military expenditure as a percentage of GDP and the number of
armed service officers per head are gauged, as are financial
contributions to UN peacekeeping missions.

THE EXPERT PANEL


An international panel of independent experts played a key role
in establishing the GPI in 2007in selecting the indicators
that best assess a nations level of peace and in assigning their
weightings. The panel has overseen each edition of the GPI;
this year, it included:
Professor Kevin P. Clements, chairperson
Foundation Chair of Peace and Conflict Studies and director,
National Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies, University of
Otago, New Zealand
Dr Sabina Alkire
Director, Oxford Poverty & Human Development Initiative
(OPHI), University of Oxford, United Kingdom
Dr Ian Anthony
Research Coordinator and Director of the Programme on Arms
Control, Disarmament and Non-proliferation, Director a.i.,
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI),
Sweden.
Ms Isabelle Arradon
Director of Research and Deputy Director of Communications
& Outreach, International Crisis Group, Belgium
Mr Nick Grono
CEO, The Freedom Fund, United Kingdom
Dr Manuela Mesa
Director, Centre for Education and Peace Research (CEIPAZ)
and president, Spanish Association for Peace Research (AIPAZ),
Madrid, Spain
Dr Ekaterina Stepanova
Head, Unit on Peace and Conflict Studies, Institute of the
World Economy and International Relations (IMEMO),
Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Appendices

95

THE INDICATORS
The GPI comprises 23 indicators of the violence or fear of violence.
The indicators were originally selected with the assistance of the
expert panel in 2007 and have been reviewed by the expert panel
on an annual basis. All scores for each indicator are normalised on
a scale of 1-5, whereby qualitative indicators are banded into five
groupings and quantitative ones are scored from 1-5, to the third
decimal point.

ONGOING DOMESTIC AND


INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT
Number and duration of internal conflicts
Uppsala Conflict Data Program (UCDP) Battle-Related Deaths
Dataset, Non-State Conflict Dataset and One-sided Violence
Dataset; Institute for Economics and Peace (IEP)
Number of deaths from organised conflict (external)
UCDP Armed Conflict Dataset
Number of deaths from organised conflict (internal)
International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) Armed
Conflict Database (ACD)
Number, duration and role in external conflicts
UCDP Battle-Related Deaths Dataset; IEP
Intensity of organised internal conflict
Qualitative assessment by EIU analysts
Relations with neighbouring countries
Qualitative assessment by EIU analysts

SOCIETAL SAFETY AND SECURITY


Level of perceived criminality in society
Qualitative assessment by EIU analysts
Number of refugees and internally displaced people
as a percentage of the population
Office of the High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)
Mid-Year Trends; Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre
(IDMC)
Political instability
Qualitative assessment by EIU analysts
Political Terror Scale
Qualitative assessment of Amnesty International and
US State Department yearly reports
Impact of terrorism
IEP Global Terrorism Index (GTI)

96

Number of homicides per 100,000 people


United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) Surveys
on Crime Trends and the Operations of Criminal Justice
Systems (CTS); EIU estimates
Level of violent crime
Qualitative assessment by EIU analysts
Likelihood of violent demonstrations
Qualitative assessment by EIU analysts
Number of jailed population per 100,000 people
World Prison Brief, International Centre for Prison Studies,
University of Essex
Number of internal security officers and police
per 100,000 people UNODC; EIU estimates

MILITARISATION

Military expenditure as a percentage of GDP


The Military Balance, IISS
Number of armed services personnel per 100,000 people
The Military Balance, IISS
Volume of transfers of major conventional weapons
as recipient (imports) per 100,000 people
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI)
Arms Transfers Database
Volume of transfers of major conventional weapons as
supplier (exports) per 100,000 people
SIPRI Arms Transfers Database
Financial contribution to UN peacekeeping missions
United Nations Committee on Contributions; IEP
Nuclear and heavy weapons capabilities
The Military Balance, IISS; SIPRI; UN Register of
Conventional Arms; IEP
Ease of access to small arms and light weapons
Qualitative assessment by EIU analysts

METHODOLOGICAL NOTES

WEIGHTING THE INDEX

CHANGES TO THE INDEX

When the GPI was launched in 2007 the advisory panel of


independent experts apportioned scores based on the relative
importance of each of the indicators on a scale 1-5. Two
sub-component weighted indices were then calculated from the
GPI group of indicators:

In the 2016 edition of the GPI, there were two main


improvements.
The first concerns the scoring and banding of indicators. All
quantitative indicators are now coded with continuous values
(instead of rounding to whole or half numbers), rounded to the
third decimal point. The purpose of this change is to make the
index more accurate and more responsive to changes in the
quantitative indicators. Additionally, the bands of a number of
quantitative indicators have been revised in order to remove
outliers and make indicators more responsive to changes in
score. For more detail on the indicator bands, see Appendix B.
The second concerns the addition of a 163rd country. In this
years GPI Palestine has been included for the first time. The
goal of IEP is to measure the level of peacefulness in as much
of the world as possible. Based on the advice of the GPI Expert
Panel, IEP and the EIU have worked to develop and source
adequate data to include Palestine as the 163rd country or
territory covered in the GPI. The geographical definition of
Palestine for the purposes of the GPI includes the West Bank
(including East Jerusalem) as well as the Gaza Strip.
IEP bases inclusion in the GPI on the basis that a country has
a population of at least one million people or a landmass of
greater than 20,000 kilometres squared. Smaller countries
present unique challenges for the measurement and
comparability of data on direct violence. Using these criteria,
the GPI covers more than 99.7 per cent of the global
population. Beyond these thresholds for the minimum size of a
country, inclusion in the index is dependent upon the
availability, reliability and practicality of the data for each of
the GPIs 23 indicators.
IEP does not make normative or political judgements about
what constitutes an independent state. Rather, the goal is to
generate as comprehensive and accurate a measure of peace for
as much of the worlds population as possible.
The treatment of Palestine as a country-unit is substantiated
by increasing international recognition of the State of
Palestine:

The State of Palestine was granted non-member observer


status by the United Nations in 2012, considered a de facto
recognition.

The State is formally recognised by more than 130 other


countries.

Palestine was admitted as a member of the International


Criminal Court in 2015.

The State of Palestine administers its own bodies and


institutions, such as a police force and a parliament,
making it measurable from a data perspective.

1) A measure of how at peace internally a country is;


2) A measure of how at peace externally a country is
(its state of peace beyond its borders).
The overall composite score and index was then formulated by
applying a weight of 60 percent to the measure of internal
peace and 40 percent for external peace. The heavier weight
applied to internal peace was agreed upon by the advisory
panel, following robust debate. The decision was based on the
innovative notion that a greater level of internal peace is likely
to lead to, or at least correlate with, lower external conflict. The
weights have been reviewed by the advisory panel prior to the
compilation of each edition of the GPI.

MEASURING THE ROBUSTNESS OF THE INDEX


Robustness is an important concept in composite index


analysis. It is a measure of how often rank comparisons
from a composite index are still true if the index is
calculated using different weightings. For example, if the
GPI is recalculated using a large number of different
weighting schemes and Country A ranks higher than
Country B in 60 per cent of these recalculations, the
statement Country A is more peaceful than Country B is
considered to be 60 per cent robust.

IEP finds that the Global Peace Index (GPI) is at the same
level of absolute robustness as the Human Development
Index (HDI), a leading measure of development since it
was first constructed by the United Nations Development
Programme in 1990.

Technically, the robustness of the GPI is measured by the


fact that 70 per cent of pairwise country comparisons are
independent of the weighting scheme chosen. In other
words, regardless of the weights attributed to each
component of the index 70 per cent of the time the pairwise
comparisons between countries are the same.

The GPI is a composite index of 23 indicators weighted and


combined into one overall score. The weighting scheme within
any composite index represents the relative importance of each
indicator to the overall aim of the measure, in the GPIs case,
global peace. To fully understand the representative nature or
accuracy of any measure it is necessary to understand how
sensitive the results of the index are to the specific weighting
scheme used. If the analysis holds true for a large subset of all
possible weighting schemes then the results can be called
robust. While it is expected that ranks will be sensitive to
changes in the weights of any composite index, what is more

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Appendices

97

important in a practical sense is the robustness of country


comparisons. One of the core aims of the GPI is to allow for
Country A to be compared to Country B. This raises the
question that for any two countries, how often is the first
ranked more peaceful than the second across the spectrum of
weights. The more times that the first country is ranked more
peaceful than the second, the more confidence can be invested
in the statement Country A is more peaceful than Country B.
To avoid the computational issue of evaluating every possible
combination of 23 indicators, the robustness of pairwise
country comparisons has been estimated using the three GPI
domains militarisation, societal safety and security and
ongoing conflict. Implementing an accepted methodology for
robustness, the GPI is calculated for every weighting
combination of three weights from 0 to 1 at 0.01 intervals. For
computational expedience only weighting schemes that sum to
one are selected, resulting in over 5100 recalculated GPIs.
Applying this it is found that around 70 per cent of all pairwise
country comparisons in the GPI are independent of the
weighting scheme, i.e. 100 per cent robust. This is a similar
level of absolute robustness as the Human Development Index.

QUALITATIVE SCORING: THE ECONOMIST


INTELLIGENCE UNIT APPROACH
The EIUs Country Analysis team plays an important role in
producing the GPI by scoring seven qualitative indicators and
filling in data gaps on quantitative indicators when official data
is missing. The EIU employs more than 100 full-time country
experts and economists, supported by 650 in-country
contributors. Analysts generally focus on two or three
countries and, in conjunction with local contributors, develop
a deep knowledge of a nations political scene, the performance
of its economy and the society in general. Scoring follows a
strict process to ensure reliability, consistency and
comparability:
1) Individual country analysts score qualitative
indicators based on a scoring methodology and
using a digital platform;
2) Regional directors use the digital platform to check
scores across the region; through the platform they
can see how individual countries fare against each
other and evaluate qualitative assessments behind
proposed score revisions;
3) Indicator scores are checked by the EIUs Custom
Research team (which has responsibility for the GPI)
to ensure global comparability;
4) If an indicator score is found to be questionable, the
Custom Research team, and the appropriate
regional director and country analyst discuss and
make a judgment on the score;
5) Scores are assessed by the external advisory panel
before finalising the GPI;

98

6) If the expert panel finds an indicator score to be


questionable, the Custom Research team, and the
appropriate regional director and country analyst
discuss and make a final judgment on the score, which
is then discussed in turn with the advisory panel.
Because of the large scope of the GPI, occasionally data for
quantitative indicators do not extend to all nations. In this
case, country analysts are asked to suggest an alternative data
source or provide an estimate to fill any gap. This score is
checked by Regional Directors to ensure reliability and
consistency within the region, and by the Custom Research
team to ensure global comparability. Again, indicators are
assessed by the external advisory panel before finalisation.

TABLE 29 INDICATOR WEIGHTS


Internal Peace 60% / External Peace 40%
INTERNAL PEACE (WEIGHT 1 TO 5)
Perceptions of criminality

Security officers and police rate

Homicide rate

Incarceration rate

Access to small arms

Intensity of internal conflict

Violent demonstrations

Violent crime

Political instability

Political Terror

Weapons imports

Terrorism impact

Deaths from internal conflict

Internal conflicts fought

2.56

EXTERNAL PEACE (WEIGHT 1 TO 5)


Military expenditure (% GDP)

Armed services personnel rate

UN peacekeeping funding

Nuclear and heavy weapons capabilities

Weapons exports

Refugees and IDPs

Neighbouring countries relations

Number, duration and role in external conflicts

2.28

Deaths from external conflict

APPENDIX B
GPI INDICATOR SOURCES, DEFINITIONS AND SCORING CRITERIA

The information below details the sources, definitions, and scoring criteria of the 23
indicators that form the Global Peace Index. All scores for each indicator are banded or
normalised on a scale of 1-5, whereby qualitative indicators are banded into five
groupings and quantitative ones are either banded into ten groupings or rounded to the
first decimal point. The Economist Intelligence Unit has provided imputed estimates in
the rare event there are gaps in the quantitative data.

INTERNAL PEACE INDICATORS

LEVEL OF PERCEIVED CRIMINALITY IN SOCIETY


Indicator type Qualitative
Indicator weight 3
Indicator weight (% of total index)

3.8%

Data source EIU


Measurement period 16 March 2015 to 15 March 2016
Definition: Assessment of the level of perceived criminality in
society, ranked from 1-5 (very low to very high) by the EIUs
Country Analysis team. Country analysts assess this indicator
on an annual basis, for the period March to March.
Scoring Criteria:
1 = Very low: The majority of other citizens can be trusted;
very low levels of domestic insecurity.
2 = Low: An overall positive climate of trust with other
citizens.
3 = Moderate: Reasonable degree of trust in other citizens.
4 = High: High levels of distrust in other citizens; high levels
of domestic security.
5 = Very high: Very high levels of distrust in other citizens;

NUMBER OF INTERNAL SECURITY OFFICERS AND


POLICE PER 100,000 PEOPLE
Indicator type Quantitative
Indicator weight 3
Indicator weight (% of total index) 3.8%
Data source


UNODC Survey of
Crime Trends and
Operations of Criminal
Justice Systems, 2014

Measurement period

2013

Alternative Source: EIU. Where data is not provided, the


EIUs analysts have filled them based on likely scores from the
set bands of the actual data.
Definition: This indicator is sourced from the UNODC Survey of
Crime Trends and Operations of Criminal Justice Systems and
refers to the civil police force. Police means personnel in public
agencies whose principal functions are the prevention, detection
and investigation of crime and the apprehension of alleged
offenders. It is distinct from national guards or local militia.
Scoring Bands
1/5

2/5

3/5

4/5

5/5

0199.8

199.9399.8

399.9599.8

599.9799.8

> 799.9

people are extremely cautious in their dealings with


others; large number of gated communities, high
prevalence of security guards.

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Appendices

99

NUMBER OF HOMICIDES PER 100,000 PEOPLE


Indicator type

Quantitative

Indicator weight 4
Indicator weight (% of total index) 5%

Scoring Bands
1/5

2/5

3/5

4/5

5/5

0-126.405

126.406252.811

252.812379.217

379.218505.624

>505.625

Data source
UNODC Survey of
Additional Notes: The data provided by World Prison Briefs are
Crime Trends and
not annual averages but indicate the number of jailed population
Operations of Criminal
per 100,000 inhabitants in a particular month during the year. The
Justice Systems, 2014
year and month may differ from country to country.
Measurement period
2013
Alternative Source: EIU. Where data is not provided, the EIUs
analysts have filled them based on likely scores from the set
bands of the actual data.
Definition: This indicator comes from the UNODC Survey of
Crime Trends and Operations of Criminal Justice Systems.
Intentional homicide refers to death deliberately inicted on a
person by another person, including infanticide. The figures
refer to the total number of penal code offences or their
equivalent, but exclude minor road traffic and other petty
offences, brought to the attention of the police or other law
enforcement agencies and recorded by one of those agencies.
Scoring Bands
1/5

2/5

3/5

4/5

5/5

01.99

25.99

69.99

1019.99

> 20

EASE OF ACCESS TO SMALL ARMS


AND LIGHT WEAPONS
Indicator type Qualitative
Indicator weight 3
Indicator weight (% of total index) 3.8%
Data source EIU
Measurement period
16 March 2015 to
15 March 2016
Definition: Assessment of the accessibility of small arms and
light weapons (SALW), ranked from 1-5 (very limited access to
very easy access) by the EIUs Country Analysis team. Country
analysts are asked to assess this indicator on an annual basis, for
the period from March to March.
Scoring Criteria:

NUMBER OF JAILED POPULATION


PER 100,000 PEOPLE

1 = Very limited access: The country has developed policy


instruments and best practices, such as firearm licences,

Indicator type Quantitative

strengthening of export controls, codes of conduct, firearms

Indicator weight 3

or ammunition marking.

Indicator weight (% of total index) 3.8%


Data source
International Centre


for Prison Studies,
University of Essex,
World Prison Brief
Measurement period

2014

Definition: Figures are from the International Centre for Prison


Studies, and are compiled from a variety of sources. In almost all
cases the original source is the national prison administration of
the country concerned, or else the Ministry responsible for the
prison administration. Prison population rates per 100,000
people are based on estimates of the national population. In
order to compare prison population rates, and to estimate the
number of persons held in prison in the countries for which
information is not available, median rates have been used by the
International Centre for Prison Studies to minimise the effect of
countries with rates that are untypically high or low. Indeed,
comparability can be compromised by different practice in
different countries, for example with regard to pre-trial
detainees and juveniles, but also psychiatrically ill offenders and
offenders being detained for treatment for alcoholism and drug
addiction.

100

2 = Limited access: The regulation implies that it is difficult,


time-consuming and costly to obtain firearms; domestic
firearms regulation also reduces the ease with which legal
arms are diverted to illicit markets.
3 = Moderate access: There are regulations and commitment
to ensure controls on civilian possession of firearms,
although inadequate controls are not sufficient to stem the
flow of illegal weapons.
4 = Easy access: There are basic regulations, but they are not
effectively enforced; obtaining firearms is straightforward.
5 = Very easy access: There is no regulation of civilian
possession, ownership, storage, carriage and use of
firearms.

INTENSITY OF ORGANISED INTERNAL CONFLICT

LEVEL OF VIOLENT CRIME

Indicator type Qualitative

Indicator type Qualitative

Indicator weight 5

Indicator weight 4

Indicator weight (% of total index)

Indicator weight (% of total index) 5%

6.3%

Data source EIU

Data source EIU

Measurement period 16 March 2015 to 15 March 2016

Measurement period
2016

Definition: Assessment of the intensity of conflicts within the


country, ranked from 1-5 (no conflict to severe crisis) by the EIUs
Country Analysis team. Country analysts are asked to assess this
indicator on an annual basis, for the period March to March.
Scoring Criteria:
1 = No conflict.
2 = Latent conflict: Positional differences over definable
values of national importance.
3 = Manifest conflict: Explicit threats of violence; imposition
of economic sanctions by other countries.
4 = Crisis: A tense situation across most of the country; at
least one group uses violent force in sporadic incidents.
5 = Severe crisis: Civil war; violent force is used with a
certain continuity in an organised and systematic way

16 March 2015 to 15 March

Definition: Assessment of the likelihood of violent crime


ranked from 1 to 5 (very low to very high) by the EIUs
Country Analysis team based on the question, Is violent
crime likely to pose a significant problem for government and/
or business over the next two years? Country analysts assess
this question on a quarterly basis. The score provided for
March 2015 - March 2016 is the average of the scores given for
each quarter.
Scoring Criteria
Is violent crime likely to pose a significant problem for
government and/or business over the next two years?
1/5

Strongly no

2/5

No

3/5

Somewhat of a problem

4/5

Yes

5/5

Strongly yes

throughout the country.

POLITICAL INSTABILITY
LIKELIHOOD OF VIOLENT DEMONSTRATIONS

Indicator type Qualitative

Indicator type Qualitative

Indicator weight 4

Indicator weight 3

Indicator weight (% of total index) 5%

Indicator weight (% of total index) 3.8%

Data source EIU

Data source EIU

Measurement period
16 March 2015
to 15 March 2016

Measurement period

16 March 2015 to 15 March 2016

Definition: Assessment of the likelihood of violent


demonstrations ranked from 1-5 (very low to very high) by the
EIUs Country Analysis team, based on the question, Are
violent demonstrations or violent civil/labour unrest likely to
pose a threat to property or the conduct of business over the
next two years? Country analysts assess this question on a
quarterly basis. The score provided for March 2015 - March
2016 is the average of the scores given for each quarter.
Scoring Criteria
Are violent demonstrations or violent civil/labour unrest likely
to pose a threat to property or the conduct of business over the
next two years?
1/5

Strongly no

2/5

No

3/5

Somewhat of a problem

4/5

Yes

5/5

Strongly yes

Definition: Assessment of political instability ranked from


0 to 100 (very low to very high instability) by the EIUs Country
Analysis team, based on five questions. This indicator aggregates
five other questions on social unrest, orderly transfers,
opposition stance, excessive executive authority and an
international tension sub-index. Country analysts assess this
question on a quarterly basis. The score provided for March
2015March 2016 is the average of the scores given for each
quarter.
Specific Questions:
What is the risk of significant social unrest during the next
two years?
How clear, established and accepted are constitutional
mechanisms for the orderly transfer of power from one
government to another?

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Appendices

101

VOLUME OF TRANSFERS OF MAJOR CONVENTIONAL


WEAPONS, AS RECIPIENT (IMPORTS) PER 100,000
PEOPLE

How likely is it that an opposition party or group will come to


power and cause a significant deterioration in business
operating conditions?
Is excessive power concentrated or likely to be concentrated in
the executive so that executive authority lacks accountability
and possesses excessive discretion?

Indicator type Quantitative

Is there a risk that international disputes/tensions will

Data source
SIPRI Arms Transfers
Database; EIU

negatively affect the economy and/or polity?

Indicator weight 2
Indicator weight (% of total index) 2.5%

Measurement period
Scoring Bands
1/5

2/5

3/5

4/5

5/5

020.4

20.540.4

40.560.4

60.580.4

80.5100

POLITICAL TERROR SCALE


Indicator type Qualitative
Indicator weight 4
Indicator weight (% of total index) 5%
Data source
Gibney, M., Cornett, L.
& Wood, R. (2011):
Political Terror Scale
1976-2014
Measurement period

Scoring Bands
1/5

2/5

3/5

4/5

5/5

0-7.233

7.23414.468

14.46921.702

21.70328.936

>28.937

IMPACT OF TERRORISM
Indicator type Quantitative
Indicator weight 2
Indicator weight (% of total index) 2.5%

Scoring Criteria:

Data source
IEP Global Terrorism
Index (GTI)

1 = Countries under a secure rule of law, people are not


imprisoned for their view, and torture is rare or exceptional.
Political murders are extremely rare.

Measurement period
1 Jan 2004 to 31 March 2016

2 = There is a limited amount of imprisonment for nonviolent


political activity. However, few persons are affected, torture
and beatings are exceptional. Political murder is rare.

Definition: Terrorist incidents are defined as intentional acts of


violence or threat of violence by a non-state actor. This means
an incident has to meet three criteria in order for it to be
counted as a terrorist act:

3 = There is extensive political imprisonment, or a recent history


of such imprisonment. Execution or other political murders
and brutality may be common. Unlimited detention, with or
without a trial, for political views is accepted.
4 = Civil and political rights violations have expanded to large
numbers of the population. Murders, disappearances, and
torture are a common part of life. In spite of its generality,
on this level terror affects those who interest themselves in
politics or ideas.
5 = Terror has expanded to the whole population. The leaders of
these societies place no limits on the means or thoroughness
with which they pursue personal or ideological goals.
102

Definition: Measures the total volume of major conventional


weapons imported by a country between 2010 and 2014,
divided by the average population in this time period at the
100,000 people level (population data supplied by the EIU).
The SIPRI Arms Transfers Database covers all international
sales and gifts of major conventional weapons and the
technology necessary for their production. The transfer
equipment or technology is from one country, rebel force or
international organisation to another country, rebel force or
international organisation. Major conventional weapons
include: aircraft, armoured vehicles, artillery, radar systems,
missiles, ships, engines.

2014

Definition: The Political Terror Scale (PTS) measures levels of


political violence and terror that a country experiences in a
given year based on a 5-level terror scale originally developed
by Freedom House. The data used in compiling this index
comes from two different sources: the yearly country reports of
Amnesty International and the US Department of States
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices. The average of
the two scores is taken.

2010-2014

The incident must be intentional the result of a


conscious calculation on the part of a perpetrator.

The incident must entail some level of violence or threat of


violence, including property violence as well as violence
against people.

The perpetrators of the incidents must be sub-national


actors. This database does not include acts of state
terrorism.

For all incidents listed, at least two of the following three criteria
must be present:
1.

The act must be aimed at attaining a political, economic,


religious or social goal.

2.

There must be evidence of an intention to coerce,


intimidate or convey some other message to a larger
audience (or audiences) than the immediate victims.

3. The action must be outside the context of legitimate


warfare activities.
Methodology: Using the comprehensive, event-based Global
Terrorism Database, the GTI combines four variables to develop
a composite score: the number of terrorist incidents in a given
year, the total number of fatalities in a given year, the total
number of injuries caused in a given year and the approximate
level of property damage in a given year. The composite score
captures the direct effects of terrorist-related violence, in terms
of its physical effect, but also attempts to reflect the residual
effects of terrorism in terms of emotional wounds and fear by
attributing a weighted average to the damage inflicted in
previous years. As of the date of publication, the Global
Terrorism Database only logs events up to 31 Dec 2013. To assess
the impact of terrorism between this date and 15 March 2015
GPI cutoff, IEP uses data from publicly available third party
sources to impute terrorist activity in that period.

The figures relate to the country which is the main area of conflict.
For some conflicts no reliable statistics are available. Estimates of
war fatalities vary according to source, sometimes by a wide
margin. In compiling data on fatalities, the IISS has used its best
estimates and takes full responsibility for these figures. Some
overall fatality figures have been revised in light of new
information. Changes in fatality figures may therefore occur as a
result of such revisions as well as because of increased fatalities.
Fatality figures for terrorism may include deaths inflicted by the
government forces in counter-terrorism operations.
Scoring Bands
1/5

2/5

3/5

4/5

5/5

023 deaths

24998
deaths

9994,998
deaths

4,9999,998
deaths

> 9,999
deaths

NUMBER AND DURATION OF INTERNAL CONFLICTS


Indicator type

Quantitative

Indicator weight

2.56

Indicator weight (% of total index) 3.2%


Data sources
IEP; UCDP Battle-Related
Deaths Dataset, Non-State

Conflict Dataset and One-sided
Violence Dataset
Measurement period

Scoring Bands
1/5

2/5

3/5

4/5

5/5

0-13.479

13.48181.699

181.72,449.309

2,449.3133,015.949

>33,015.95

NUMBER OF DEATHS FROM ORGANISED


CONFLICT (INTERNAL)
Indicator type Quantitative

2010-2014

Definition: This indicator measures the number and duration of


conflicts that occur within a specific countrys legal boundaries.
Information for this indicator is sourced from three datasets from
Uppsala Conflict Data Program (UCDP): the Battle-Related
Deaths Dataset, Non-State Conflict Dataset and One-sided
Violence Dataset. The score for a country is determined by adding
the scores for all individual conflicts which have occurred within
that countrys legal boundaries over the last five years.

Indicator weight 5

Each individual conflict score is based on the following factors:

Indicator weight (% of total index) 6.3%

Number:

Data source
International Institute for

Strategic Studies (IISS) Armed
Conict Database (ACD)
Measurement period

Number of interstate armed conflicts, internal armed


conflict (civil conflicts), internationalised internal armed
conflicts, one-sided conflict and non-state conflict located
within a countrys legal boundaries.

If a conflict is a war (1,000+ battle-related deaths) it


receives a score of one; if it is an armed conflict (25-999
battle-related deaths) it receives a score of 0.25.

2014-2015

Alternative Source: EIU. When no data was provided by the


IISS ACD, then EIU analysts have scored the figures available for
2014 and 2015 according to the set bands of the actual data.
Definition: This indicator uses the UCDPs definition of conflict.
UCDP defines conflict as: a contested incompatibility that
concerns government and/or territory where the use of armed
force between two parties, of which at least one is the government
of a state, results in at least 25 battle-related deaths in a year.
Statistics are compiled from the most recent edition of the IISS
ACD, which has the following definition of armed conflict-related
fatalities: Fatality statistics relate to military and civilian lives lost
as a direct result of an armed conflict.

Duration:

A score is assigned based on the number of years out of the


last five that conflict has occurred. For example, if a
conflict last occurred five years ago that conflict will receive
a score of one out of five.

The cumulative conflict scores are then added and banded to


establish a countrys score. This indicator is two years lagging due
to when the UCDP data is released.

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Appendices

103

Measurement period
Scoring Bands
1/5

2/5

No internal Combined
conflict
conflict
score of up
to 4.75

2015

Alternative Source: World Bank population data used if


unavailable from the EIU.

3/5

4/5

5/5

Combined
conflict
score of up
to 9.5

Combined
conflict
score of
up to 14.25

A combined conflict
score of 19 or above.
This shows very high
levels of internal
conflict.

Definition: Active armed services personnel comprise all service


men and women on full-time duty in the army, navy, air force and
joint forces (including conscripts and long-term assignments from
the reserves). Population data provided by the EIU.
Scoring Bands

EXTERNAL PEACE INDICATORS

1/5

2/5

3/5

4/5

5/5

0-657.744

657.7451,315.489

1,315.491,973.234

1,973.2352,630.98

>2,630.981

MILITARY EXPENDITURE AS A PERCENTAGE OF GDP


Additional Notes: The Israeli reservist force is used to
calculate Israels number of armed services personnel.

Indicator type Quantitative


Indicator weight 2
Indicator weight (% of total index) 2.8%

Indicator type Quantitative

Measurement period

Indicator weight 2

20142015

Alternative Source: When no data was provided, several


alternative sources were used: National Public Expenditure
Accounts, SIPRI information and the Military Balance 2015.
Alternative data are from 2007 to 2015, depending upon data
availability.
Definition: Cash outlays of central or federal government to
meet the costs of national armed forcesincluding strategic,
land, naval, air, command, administration and support forces
as well as paramilitary forces, customs forces and border
guards if these are trained and equipped as a military force.
Published EIU data on nominal GDP (or the World Bank when
unavailable) was used to arrive at the value of military
expenditure as a percentage of GDP.
Scoring Criteria: This indicator is scored using a min-max
normalisation. Applying this method, a countrys score is based
on the distance of its military expenditure as a share of GDP
from the benchmarks of 0% (for a score of 1) and 12.97% or
above (for a score of 5). The bands, while linear, approximately
conform as follows:
1/5

2/5

3/5

4/5

5/5

0-2.092

2.0934.184

4.185-6.277

6.278-8.37

>8.371

NUMBER OF ARMED SERVICES PERSONNEL


PER 100,000 PEOPLE
Indicator type Quantitative

104

FINANCIAL CONTRIBUTION TO
UN PEACEKEEPING MISSIONS

Data source
International Institute for
Strategic Studies,

The Military Balance 2016

Indicator weight (% of total index) 2.8%


Data source


Measurement period

IEP; United Nations Committee


on Contributions
20112014

Methodology: The UNFU indicator measures whether UN


member countries meet their UN peacekeeping funding
commitments. Although countries may fund other programs in
development or peacebuilding, the records on peacekeeping are
easy to obtain and understand and provide an instructive
measure of a countrys commitment to peace. The indicator
calculates the percentage of countries outstanding payments
versus their annual assessment to the budget of the current
peacekeeping missions over an average of three years. This
ratio is derived from data provided by the United Nations
Committee on Contributions Status reports. The indicator is
compiled as follows:
1.

The status of contributions by UN member states is


obtained.

2. For the relevant peacekeeping missions, the assessments


(for that year only) and the collections (for that year only)
are recorded. From this, the outstanding amount is
calculated for that year.
3. The ratio of outstanding payments to assessments is
calculated. By doing so a score between 0 and 1 is

Indicator weight 2

obtained. Zero indicates no money is owed; a country has

Indicator weight (% of total index) 2.8%

met their funding commitments. A score of 1 indicates

Data source
International Institute for
Strategic Studies,

The Military Balance 2016

that a country has not paid any of their assessed


contributions. Given that the scores already fall between 0
and 1, they are easily banded into a score between 1 and 5.

The final banded score is a weighted sum of the current

5. Aircraft carrier and nuclear submarine = 1000 points

year and the previous two years. The weightings are 0.5 for
the current year, 0.3 for the previous year and 0.2 for two
years prior. Hence it is a three year weighted average.
5.

Outstanding payments from previous years and credits are


not included. The scoring is linear to one decimal place.

Scoring Criteria

Countries with nuclear capabilities automatically receive the


maximum score of five. Other scores are expressed to the
second decimal point, adopting a min-max normalisation that
sets the max at two standard deviations above the average raw
score. Nuclear-weapon equipped states are determined by the
SIPRI World Nuclear Forces chapter in the SIPRI Yearbook,
as follows:

1/5

025% of stated contributions owed

1/5

Nil18,185

2/5

2650% of stated contributions owed

2/5

18,18536,368

3/5

5175% of stated contributions owed

3/5

36,36854,553

4/5

7599% of stated contributions owed

4/5

54,55372,737

5/5

100% of stated contributions owed


(no contributions made in past three years)

5/5

States with nuclear capability receive a 5, or states with


heavy weapons capability of 72,738 or in the top 2% of heavy
weapons receive a 5.

Additional Notes: All United Nations member states share the


costs of United Nations peacekeeping operations. The General
Assembly apportions these expenses based on a special scale of
assessments applicable to peacekeeping. This scale takes into
account the relative economic wealth of member states, with the
permanent members of the Security Council required to pay a
larger share because of their special responsibility for the
maintenance of international peace and security. Due to delays
in the release of new data, the 2016 indicator scores take into
account a a weighted average from 2011 to 2014.

Indicator type Quantitative


Indicator weight 3
Indicator weight (% of total index) 4.2%
IEP; SIPRI; IISS The Military
Balance; United Nations
Register of Conventional Arms

Measurement period

Indicator type

Quantitative

Indicator weight

Indicator weight (% of total index) 4.2%


Data source

SIPRI Arms
Transfers Database

Measurement period

NUCLEAR AND HEAVY WEAPONS CAPABILITIES

Data source

VOLUME OF TRANSFERS OF MAJOR


CONVENTIONAL WEAPONS AS SUPPLIER
(EXPORTS) PER 100,000 PEOPLE

2014

Methodology: This indicator is based on a categorised system


for rating the destructive capability of a countrys stock of heavy
weapons. Holdings are those of government forces and do not
include holdings of armed opposition groups. Heavy weapons
numbers were determined using a combination of the
International Institute for Strategic Studies, The Military Balance
and the United Nations Register of Conventional Arms.

2010-2014

Definition: Measures the total volume of major conventional


weapons exported by a country between 2010 and 2014 divided
by the average population during this time period (population
data supplied by the EIU). The SIPRI Arms Transfers Database
covers all international sales and gifts of major conventional
weapons and the technology necessary for the production of
them. The transfer equipment or technology is from one country,
rebel force or international organisation to another country,
rebel force or international organisation. Major conventional
weapons include: aircraft, armoured vehicles, artillery, radar
systems, missiles, ships and engines.
Scoring Bands
1/5

2/5

3/5

4/5

5/5

0-3.681

3.6827.364

7.36511.046

11.04714.729

>14.73

There are five categories of weapons, each of which receive a


certain number of weighted points. The five weapons categories
are weighted as follows:
1. Armoured vehicle and artillery pieces = 1 point
2. Tank = 5 points
3. Combat aircraft and combat helicopter = 20 points
4. Warship = 100 points

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Appendices

105

NUMBER OF REFUGEES AND INTERNALLY DISPLACED


PEOPLE AS A PERCENTAGE OF THE POPULATION

NUMBER, DURATION AND ROLE


IN EXTERNAL CONFLICTS

Indicator type Quantitative

Indicator type

Quantitative

Indicator weight 4

Indicator weight

2.28

Indicator weight (% of total index) 5.7%

Indicator weight (% of total index) 3.2%

Data source
UNHCR Mid-Year Trends 2015;
International Displacement

Monitoring Centre (IDMC), 2015

Data source

Measurement period

Measurement period

IEP; UCDP Battle-Related


Deaths Dataset
2010-2014

2015

Definition: Refugee population by country or territory of origin


plus the number of a countrys internally displaced people
(IDPs), as a percentage of the countrys total population.
Scoring Bands
1/5

2/5

3/5

4/5

5/5

0-3.034

3.0356.069

6.07-9.104

9.10512.139

>12.14

Definition: This indicator measures the number and duration


of extraterritorial conflicts a country is involved in.
Information for this indicator is sourced from the UCDP
Battle-Related Deaths Dataset. The score for a country is
determined by adding all individual conflict scores where that
country is involved as an actor in a conflict outside its legal
boundaries. Conflicts are not counted against a country if they
have already been counted against that country in the number
and duration of internal conflicts indicator.
Each individual conflict score is based on the following factors:

RELATIONS WITH NEIGHBOURING COUNTRIES


Indicator type Qualitative
Indicator weight 5

Number:

Number of internationalised internal armed conflicts


and interstate armed conflicts.

If a conflict is a war (1,000+ battle related deaths)


it receives a score of one; if it is an armed conflict
(25-999 battle related deaths) it receives a score of 0.25.

Indicator weight (% of total index) 7.1%


Data source EIU
Measurement period
16 March 2015 to
15 March 2016
Definition: Assessment of the intensity of contentiousness of
neighbours, ranked from 1-5 (peaceful to very aggressive) by
the EIUs Country Analysis team. Country analysts are asked
to assess this indicator on an annual basis, for the period
March to March.
Scoring Criteria
1 = Peaceful: None of the neighbours has attacked the
country since 1950.
2 = Low: The relationship with neighbours is generally good,
but aggressiveness is manifest in politicians speeches or
in protectionist measures.
3 = Moderate: There are serious tensions and consequent
economic and diplomatic restrictions from other
countries.
4 = Aggressive: Open conflicts with violence and protests.
5 = Very aggressive: Frequent invasions by neighbouring
countries.

106

Duration:

A score is assigned based on the number of years out of


the last five that conflict has occurred. For example, if a
conflict last occurred five years ago that conflict will
receive a score of one out of five.

Role:

If the country is a primary party to the conflict, that


conflict receives a score of one; if it is a secondary party
(supporting the primary party), that conflict receives a
score of 0.25.

If a country is a party to a force covered by a relevant


United Nations Security Council Resolution, then the
entire conflict score is multiplied by a quarter; if not, it
receives a full score.

The different conflict scores are then added and banded to


establish a countrys score. This indicator is two years lagging due
to when the UCDP data is released.
Scoring Bands

1/5

2/5

3/5

4/5

5/5

No
external
conflict

Combined
conflict
score of up
to 1.5

Combined
conflict
score of up
to 3

Combined
conflict
score of up
to 4.5

A combined conflict
score of 6 or above.
This shows very high
levels of external
conflict.

NUMBER OF DEATHS FROM ORGANISED


CONFLICT (EXTERNAL)
Indicator type

Quantitative

Indicator weight

Indicator weight (% of total index) 7.1%


Data source
UCDP Armed Conflict
Dataset
Measurement period

2014-2015

Alternate Source: When no data was provided, several


alternative sources have been used: International Institute for
Strategic Studies (IISS) Armed Conflict Database; the Iraq
Coalition Casualty Count, and the EIU.
Definition: This indicator uses the UCDPs definition of
conflict as a contested incompatibility that concerns
government and/or territory where the use of armed force
between two parties, of which at least one is the government of
a state, results in at least 25 battle-related deaths in a year.
Scoring Bands
1/5

2/5

3/5

4/5

5/5

023 deaths

24998
deaths

9994,998
deaths

4,9999,998
deaths

> 9,999
deaths

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Appendices

107

APPENDIX C
VIOLENCE CONTAINMENT COSTS BY COUNTRY

108

VIOLENCE CONTAINMENT COST


AS PERCENTAGE OF GDP

PER CAPITA VIOLENCE


CONTAINMENT COST
(2014 PPP)

TOTAL COST OF VIOLENCE


CONTAINMENT
(MILLIONS, 2014 PPP)

COUNTRY

VIOLENCE CONTAINMENT RANK


BY % OF GDP

VIOLENCE CONTAINMENT COST


AS PERCENTAGE OF GDP

PER CAPITA VIOLENCE


CONTAINMENT COST
(2014 PPP)

TOTAL COST OF VIOLENCE


CONTAINMENT
(MILLIONS, 2014 PPP)

COUNTRY

VIOLENCE CONTAINMENT RANK


BY % OF GDP

TABLE 6.1 VIOLENCE CONTAINMENT COSTS BY COUNTRY, TOTAL IN MILLIONS OF 2014 PPP, PER CAPITA IN
2014 PPP AND AS A PERCENTAGE OF GDP

23,593

1,065

54%

36

Pakistan

124,922

675

13%

206,444

5,930

54%

37

Georgia

3,522

782

12%

Afghanistan

27,050

855

45%

38

Guyana

692

907

12%

Venezuela

79,613

2,594

43%

39

The Gambia

318

165

12%

South Sudan

8,213

689

35%

40

Cuba

28,395

2,495

12%

Honduras

13,702

1,721

34%

41

Algeria

54,372

1,397

12%

Colombia

139,481

2,919

30%

42

United States

2,130,344

6,681

12%

Central African Republic

781

163

29%

43

Chad

2,918

215

12%

North Korea

4,949

198

28%

44

Cote dIvoire

7,503

339

11%

10

Lesotho

1,455

690

28%

45

7,307

98

11%

11

Libya

17,766

2,839

25%

Democratic Republic of the


Congo

12

Mauritania

2,999

756

21%

46

Nigeria

104,378

588

11%

13

Somalia

1,170

111

20%

47

Zimbabwe

2,903

190

11%

14

Saudi Arabia

274,470

8,886

20%

48

Azerbaijan

15,181

1,592

11%

15

Oman

49

Gabon

2,506

1,485

10%

16

South Africa

50

Turkey

129,104

1,700

10%

17

51

Israel

25,897

3,152

10%

52

Guinea-Bissau

240

134

10%

53

Uganda

5,840

155

9%

54

Angola

13,186

544

9%

55

Serbia

7,057

990

9%

56

Iran

117,695

1,506

9%

57

Nicaragua

2,869

477

9%

58

Ecuador

16,362

1,029

9%

59

Panama

7,582

1,961

9%

60

Burundi

718

66

9%

61

Kuwait

18,470

4,921

9%

62

Eritrea

979

192

9%

63

Egypt

83,051

927

9%

64

Mongolia

3,124

1,074

9%

65

India

679,803

525

9%

66

Bolivia

6,085

576

9%

67

Myanmar

19,396

363

8%

68

Montenegro

652

1,048

8%

69

Philippines

60,979

615

8%

Syria

Iraq

24,218

5,717

20%

124,336

2,302

19%

El Salvador

9,950

1,629

19%

18

Yemen

17,867

682

19%

19

Botswana

5,512

2,483

19%

20

Cyprus

4,055

3,515

18%

21

Sudan

33,413

849

18%

22

Jamaica

4,315

1,586

18%

23

Ukraine

44,430

979

18%

24

Bahrain

9,617

7,061

17%

25

Guatemala

19,591

1,223

15%

26

Mali

3,694

216

15%

27

Namibia

3,466

1,443

15%

28

Mexico

272,924

2,177

14%

29

Russia

342,665

2,383

14%

30

Palestine

2,673

622

14%

31

Trinidad and Tobago

5,692

4,202

14%

32

Brazil

338,075

1,641

14%

33

Dominican Republic

19,328

1,857

13%

34

Swaziland

1,372

1,081

13%

35

Republic of the Congo

2,233

496

13%

VIOLENCE CONTAINMENT COST


AS PERCENTAGE OF GDP

PER CAPITA VIOLENCE


CONTAINMENT COST
(2014 PPP)

TOTAL COST OF VIOLENCE


CONTAINMENT
(MILLIONS, 2014 PPP)

COUNTRY

VIOLENCE CONTAINMENT RANK


BY % OF GDP

VIOLENCE CONTAINMENT COST


AS PERCENTAGE OF GDP

PER CAPITA VIOLENCE


CONTAINMENT COST
(2014 PPP)

TOTAL COST OF VIOLENCE


CONTAINMENT
(MILLIONS, 2014 PPP)

COUNTRY

VIOLENCE CONTAINMENT RANK


BY % OF GDP

70

Uzbekistan

14,549

473

8%

119

Poland

45,781

1,205

6%

71

Benin

1,389

131

8%

120

Croatia

4,228

998

5%

72

Lebanon

7,476

1,644

8%

121

Portugal

13,572

1,305

5%

73

Macedonia

1,870

901

8%

122

Liberia

194

44

5%

74

Jordan

6,491

983

8%

123

Belgium

21,782

1,940

5%

75

Togo

708

100

8%

124

France

114,597

1,731

5%

76

Tanzania

9,153

177

7%

125

Tajikistan

1,008

122

5%

77

Bulgaria

7,327

1,014

7%

126

Chile

18,991

1,069

5%

78

Cambodia

3,874

253

7%

127

Bhutan

343

448

5%

79

Peru

24,017

775

7%

128

Sweden

19,523

2,015

5%

80

Moldova

1,002

282

7%

129

Guinea

764

62

5%

81

Armenia

1,602

533

7%

130

Taiwan

25,751

1,099

5%

82

Bosnia and Herzegovina

2,312

606

7%

131

Slovakia

6,411

1,183

5%

83

Thailand

69,940

1,033

7%

132

Germany

159,833

1,976

5%

84

Lithuania

4,818

1,645

7%

133

Australia

43,108

1,835

5%

85

Sri Lanka

16,467

798

7%

134

Kyrgyz Republic

903

155

5%

86

Viet Nam

38,425

424

7%

135

Sierra Leone

523

83

5%

87

Haiti

1,295

122

7%

136

Czech Republic

13,577

1,292

5%

88

Albania

1,829

632

7%

137

Singapore

19,776

3,616

5%

89

Rwanda

1,403

124

7%

138

Italy

82,361

1,343

5%

90

Tunisia

8,181

744

7%

139

Finland

8,518

1,559

5%

91

Morocco

16,659

491

7%

140

Netherlands

32,034

1,901

5%

92

Paraguay

3,735

570

7%

141

Ghana

4,714

176

4%

93

Qatar

18,239

8,397

7%

142

Malaysia

30,285

1,013

4%

94

Zambia

3,598

229

6%

143

Equatorial Guinea

767

935

4%

95

Laos

2,415

361

6%

144

Cameroon

2,543

112

4%

96

Nepal

4,676

166

6%

145

New Zealand

5,719

1,268

4%

97

Mauritius

1,384

1,098

6%

146

Spain

55,165

1,189

4%

98

Senegal

1,962

134

6%

147

Slovenia

2,021

980

4%

99

Ethiopia

10,554

109

6%

148

Bangladesh

21,815

137

4%

100

Kosovo

903

496

6%

149

Papua New Guinea

835

112

4%

101

Estonia

1,948

1,483

6%

150

Timor-Leste

293

242

4%

102

Turkmenistan

4,754

896

6%

151

China

700,632

514

4%

103

Kenya

8,573

191

6%

152

Malawi

678

41

3%

104

Kazakhstan

23,365

1,351

6%

153

Ireland

6,625

1,436

3%

105

Djibouti

191

218

6%

154

Norway

8,514

1,658

3%

106

Hungary

12,506

1,268

6%

155

Denmark

6,665

1,182

3%

107

Niger

939

49

6%

156

Japan

121,616

957

3%

108

Greece

13,848

1,264

6%

157

Madagascar

885

38

3%

109

Costa Rica

4,370

918

6%

158

Switzerland

13,184

1,610

3%

110

United Arab Emirates

29,806

3,280

6%

159

Mozambique

914

34

3%

111

Belarus

7,953

840

6%

160

Austria

8,772

1,028

3%

112

United Kingdom

139,886

2,168

6%

161

Iceland

334

1,021

2%

113

Romania

19,071

958

6%

162

Canada

32,431

913

2%

114

South Korea

95,630

1,897

6%

163

Indonesia

52,275

205

2%

115

Argentina

32,123

747

6%

116

Uruguay

3,793

1,109

6%

117

Burkina Faso

1,453

83

6%

118

Latvia

2,237

1,124

6%

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Appendices

109

APPENDIX D
2016 GPI DOMAIN SCORES

110

COUNTRY

SCORE

COUNTRY

SCORE

COUNTRY

SCORE

COUNTRY

SCORE

COUNTRY

SCORE

TABLE 6.2 ONGOING DOMESTIC AND INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT DOMAIN, MOST PEACEFUL TO LEAST

Botswana

United Kingdom

1.235

El Salvador

1.465

Bangladesh

1.670

Iran

2.267

Switzerland

Albania

1.282

Cambodia

1.469

Greece

1.685

Burundi

2.280

Chile

Croatia

1.282

Ghana

1.475

United States of
America

1.686

Armenia

2.325

Mauritius

Ireland

1.282

Sierra Leone

1.475

Mauritania

1.700

Azerbaijan

2.356

Uruguay

Mongolia

1.282

Bosnia and
Herzegovina

1.484

Jordan

1.752

Mexico

2.418

Hungary

1.484

Cote d'Ivoire

1.789

Israel

2.429

Egypt

2.468

Brazil

1.030

Poland

1.291

Singapore

1.069

Angola

1.403

Austria

1.081

Argentina

1.403

Bulgaria

1.081

Bolivia

1.403

Spain

1.081

Bhutan

1.403

Iceland

1.081

Dominican Republic

1.403

New Zealand

1.081

Equatorial Guinea

1.403

Portugal

1.081

Guyana

1.403

Romania

1.093

Japan

1.403

Malaysia

1.111

Kuwait

1.403

Finland

1.117

Lesotho

1.403

Italy

1.117

Madagascar

1.403

Norway

1.117

Malawi

1.403

Sweden

1.117

Nicaragua

1.403

Czech Republic

1.125

Oman

1.403

Germany

1.126

Qatar

1.403

Denmark

1.129

Swaziland

1.403

Australia

1.137

Timor-Leste

1.403

Netherlands

1.140

Tanzania

1.403

Canada

1.149

Vietnam

1.403

Belgium

1.165

Peru

1.432

France

1.191

Papua New Guinea

1.432

Costa Rica

1.201

Benin

Jamaica

1.201

Namibia

1.201

Panama

Lithuania

1.484

Uganda

1.800

Latvia

1.484

Belarus

1.805

Montenegro

1.484

Cuba

1.805

Slovakia

1.484

Eritrea

1.805

Slovenia

1.484

The Gambia

1.805

Guinea

1.498

Morocco

1.805

Indonesia

1.506

Moldova

1.805

Estonia

1.520

Venezuela

1.805

United Arab Emirates

1.531

Zimbabwe

1.805

Republic of the Congo

1.604

Kosovo

1.810

Cyprus

1.604

Uzbekistan

1.832

Ecuador

1.604

Senegal

1.871

Gabon

1.604

South Korea

1.886

Haiti

1.604

Macedonia (FYR)

1.886

Laos

1.604

Georgia

1.895

Sri Lanka

1.604

China

2.004

Ethiopia

2.481

Myanmar

2.482

Kenya

2.497

Mali

2.502

North Korea

2.610

Turkey

2.636

Russia

2.639

Philippines

2.664

Lebanon

2.740

Libya

2.984

Palestine

3.018

India

3.045

Nigeria

3.094

Yemen

3.125

Iraq

3.188
3.191

Paraguay

1.604

Rwanda

2.029

Democratic Republic
of the Congo

Serbia

1.604

Algeria

2.043

Ukraine

3.272

Tunisia

1.604

Niger

2.043

Sudan

3.384

Taiwan

1.604

Saudi Arabia

2.054

Central African
Republic

3.402

South Africa

1.604

Chad

2.056

1.439

Guatemala

1.634

Kyrgyz Republic

2.094

Burkina Faso

1.439

Mozambique

1.634

Bahrain

2.095

Pakistan

3.617

Liberia

1.439

Kazakhstan

1.635

Thailand

2.121

South Sudan

3.732

1.201

Nepal

1.439

Turkmenistan

1.635

Cameroon

2.181

Syria

3.827

Trinidad and Tobago

1.201

Togo

1.439

Guinea-Bissau

1.640

Colombia

2.239

Zambia

1.201

Honduras

1.462

Djibouti

1.669

Tajikistan

2.239

Somalia

3.538

Afghanistan

3.603

COUNTRY

SCORE

COUNTRY

SCORE

COUNTRY

SCORE

COUNTRY

SCORE

TABLE 6.3 SOCIETAL SAFETY AND SECURITY DOMAIN, MOST PEACEFUL TO LEAST

2.517

Jamaica

2.932

Algeria

2.531

Cote d'Ivoire

2.936

2.164

China

2.536

Philippines

2.949

2.167

Cuba

2.538

Thailand

2.965

Laos

2.167

Sri Lanka

2.552

Burundi

2.967

Indonesia

2.170

Tanzania

2.555

Mauritania

2.967

1.386

Malawi

2.171

Mozambique

2.557

Guyana

2.987

1.415

Costa Rica

2.171

Ethiopia

2.558

Turkey

2.992

Finland

1.424

Madagascar

2.200

Paraguay

2.574

Cameroon

3.000

New Zealand

1.449

Vietnam

2.224

Ecuador

2.581

Palestine

3.025

Canada

1.472

Malaysia

2.260

Argentina

2.606

Chad

3.066

Netherlands

1.528

Israel

2.261

Azerbaijan

2.616

North Korea

3.109

Germany

1.571

Armenia

2.265

Bolivia

2.617

Brazil

3.115

Bhutan

1.571

Uruguay

2.331

Nepal

2.619

Guatemala

3.131

Portugal

1.573

Greece

2.333

Bangladesh

2.622

El Salvador

3.133

Australia

1.589

Georgia

2.340

Kyrgyz Republic

2.624

Lebanon

3.152

Singapore

1.603

Montenegro

2.341

Uzbekistan

2.628

Honduras

3.169

Ireland

1.614

Zambia

2.342

Nicaragua

2.637

South Africa

3.225

Czech Republic

1.639

Senegal

2.355

Belarus

2.648

Pakistan

3.226

South Korea

1.718

Macedonia (FYR)

2.360

Burkina Faso

2.663

Eritrea

3.235

Poland

1.747

Morocco

2.384

Uganda

2.670

Mexico

3.239

Slovakia

1.747

Mongolia

2.393

The Gambia

2.671

Russia

3.308

Hungary

1.794

Timor-Leste

2.394

Haiti

2.716

Ukraine

3.384

Qatar

1.818

Albania

2.398

Cambodia

2.730

Nigeria

3.449

Belgium

1.852

Cyprus

2.404

Niger

2.737

Venezuela

3.555

Spain

1.852

Jordan

2.406

Guinea

2.762

Colombia

3.588

Croatia

1.863

Togo

2.415

Turkmenistan

2.763

Libya

3.668

United Kingdom

1.868

Equatorial Guinea

2.416

Iran

2.786

Sudan

3.714

France

1.894

Bosnia and
Herzegovina

Peru

2.786

Democratic Republic
of the Congo

3.809

Taiwan

1.896

Angola

2.792

Yemen

3.992

Romania

1.933

Moldova

2.433

Swaziland

2.819

Somalia

4.071

United States of
America

2.016

India

2.450

Mali

2.831

4.118

Latvia

2.019

Tunisia

2.452

Djibouti

2.840

Central African
Republic

Namibia

2.470

2.841

4.136

2.034

Rwanda

Afghanistan

Estonia

South Sudan

4.241

Mauritius

2.044

Saudi Arabia

2.470

Serbia

2.094

Benin

2.475

Ghana

2.095

Liberia

2.486

Iceland

1.248

Sierra Leone

2.134

Tajikistan

Switzerland

1.294

Oman

2.140

Denmark

1.302

Italy

Norway

1.313

Kuwait

Sweden

1.339

Japan

1.347

Austria
Slovenia

Bulgaria

2.099

Lithuania

2.112

Lesotho

2.430
2.430

Kosovo

2.487

Kazakhstan

2.492

Chile

2.114

Panama

2.493

United Arab Emirates

2.124

Myanmar

2.505

Botswana

2.126

Gabon

2.512

Egypt

2.849

Dominican Republic

2.867

Bahrain

2.880

Guinea-Bissau

2.904

Papua New Guinea

2.905

Republic of the Congo

2.905

Zimbabwe

2.908

Trinidad and Tobago

2.915

Kenya

2.918

Syria

4.244

Iraq

4.333

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Appendices

111

COUNTRY

SCORE

SCORE

COUNTRY

1.130

Ecuador

1.642

Eritrea

1.892

Greece

2.083

Czech Republic

1.176

Montenegro

1.648

Rwanda

1.894

Lebanon

2.091

Iceland

1.264

Bulgaria

1.649

Finland

1.895

Singapore

2.098

Bhutan

1.272

Philippines

1.653

Spain

1.896

Algeria

2.098

Slovenia

1.285

Timor-Leste

1.654

Burkina Faso

1.902

Netherlands

2.132

New Zealand

1.285

Peru

1.675

Dominican Republic

1.905

Turkey

2.148

Denmark

1.307

Serbia

1.675

Equatorial Guinea

1.915

Jordan

2.149

Malaysia

1.311

Uruguay

1.683

Kuwait

1.935

Brazil

2.156

Moldova

1.312

Guatemala

1.684

Bolivia

1.935

Sweden

2.172

Latvia

1.329

Botswana

1.689

Cote d'Ivoire

1.937

Cambodia

2.172

Ireland

1.347

Mexico

1.690

Liberia

1.939

Sri Lanka

2.174

Portugal

1.358

Sierra Leone

1.701

Colombia

1.939

United Arab Emirates

2.191

Austria

1.369

Laos

1.701

Romania

1.939

Somalia

2.242

Lithuania

1.389

Chile

1.701

Macedonia (FYR)

1.940

Palestine

2.252

Mozambique

1.427

Swaziland

1.703

Armenia

1.963

Djibouti

2.261

Indonesia

1.436

Cyprus

1.711

Benin

1.965

Venezuela

2.271

Japan

1.440

Nigeria

1.712

Tajikistan

1.967

South Sudan

2.287

Tanzania

1.449

Ethiopia

1.716

Morocco

1.972

Azerbaijan

2.288

Belgium

1.459

Croatia

1.716

Belarus

1.988

Norway

2.406

Estonia

1.468

Honduras

1.720

Qatar

2.000

Afghanistan

2.421

The Gambia

1.479

Australia

1.722

Kyrgyz Republic

2.009

Yemen

2.430

Mauritius

1.485

Uganda

1.724

Italy

2.010

India

2.472

Senegal

1.500

Niger

1.727

Iran

2.011

Sudan

2.500

Thailand

1.506

Kazakhstan

1.740

Mauritania

2.017

Libya

2.513

Madagascar

1.513

Paraguay

1.742

Burundi

2.020

Pakistan

2.551

Slovakia

1.518

South Africa

1.746

Uzbekistan

2.026

Saudi Arabia

2.581

Kosovo

1.530

El Salvador

1.750

Angola

2.026

United Kingdom

2.586

Guyana

1.532

Kenya

1.753

Turkmenistan

2.028

France

2.595

Cuba

1.559

Albania

1.755

Republic of the Congo

2.033

Iraq

2.670

Panama

1.568

Myanmar

1.770

Switzerland

2.036

Oman

2.743

Cameroon

1.579

Georgia

1.774

Zimbabwe

2.036

Ukraine

2.810

Tunisia

1.579

Trinidad and Tobago

1.776

Vietnam

2.038

United States of
America

3.023

Canada

1.580

Namibia

1.789

South Korea

2.040

Syria

3.059

Costa Rica

1.581

Nepal

1.808

Bahrain

2.048

North Korea

3.135

Poland

1.582

Ghana

1.809

China

2.055

Russia

3.314

Haiti

1.587

Malawi

1.812

Egypt

2.058

Israel

3.817

Bosnia and
Herzegovina

1.592

Gabon

1.822

Central African
Republic

2.059

Argentina

1.597

Papua New Guinea

1.834

Guinea

2.060

Bangladesh

1.597

Germany

1.839

Guinea-Bissau

2.061

Mongolia

1.611

Taiwan

1.859
1.860

2.062

1.635

Lesotho

Mali

Nicaragua

1.637

Jamaica

1.885

2.082

Zambia

Democratic Republic
of the Congo

Togo

1.891

Chad

2.082

Hungary

112

COUNTRY

SCORE

COUNTRY

SCORE

TABLE 6.4 MILITARISATION DOMAIN, MOST PEACEFUL TO LEAST

END NOTES

Section 3
Global Economic Value of Peace
1. United Nations Conference on Trade and Development,
Global investment report, 2015, accessed 13 May 2016,
http://unctad.org/en/PublicationsLibrary/wir2015_en.pdf
2. Sandler, T., and Justin, G, Military Expenditure Trends for
19602014 and What They Reveal. Global Policy,2016.
3. World Trade Organisation, International Trade Statistics,
2015, accessed 9 May 2016, https://www.wto.org/english/
res_e/statis_e/its2015_e/its2015_e.pdf
4. Brauer, J., and Marlin, J.T., Nonkilling Economics:
Calculating the size of peace gross world product, Toward
a Nonkillin paradigm, Honolulu, Centre for Global
Nonkilling, 2009, p. 125-148.

14. World Bank, Lebanon - Economic and social impact


assessment of the Syrian conflict., 2013, accessed 13 May
2016, http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/
en/2013/09/18292074/lebanon-economic-social-impactassessment-syrian-conflict
15. Collier, P.,On the economic consequences of civil war.,
Oxford economic papers, 51(1), 168-183, 1999.
16. Sgueo, G., Counter-Terrorism Funding in the EU Budget.,
European Parliamentary Research Service, June, 2015

Section 4
Positive Peace & System Thinking
1.

6. S. R. Hiatt, and W. D. Sine, Clear and present danger:


planning and new venture survival amid political and civil
violence, Strategic Management Journal, vol. 35, no. 5,
2014, pp. 773-785.

International Alert, Peace through Prosperity: Integrating


peacebuilding into economic development, 2015,
accessed 13 May 2016, http://www.international-alert.org/
sites/default/files/Economy_PeaceThroughProsperity_
EN_2015.pdf

2.

7. J. Brauer and J. Tepper-Marlin, Defining Peace Industries


and Calculating the Potential Size of a Gross World Product
by Country and by Economic Sector, Institute for
Economics and Peace, Sydney, 2009.

Barnes, C. 2006. Agents for Change: Civil Society Roles in


Preventing War & Building Peace. Global Partnership for
the Prevention of Armed Violence. Issue Paper 2. The
Hague: September.

3.

Macy, J., Mutual Causality in Buddhism and General


Systems Theory The Dharma of Natural Systems, 2010,
State University of New York Press, New York.

4.

Coppola, D., Introduction to International Disaster


Management, 2007, Oxford: Elsevier, p. 25.

5.

United States Institute of Peace, Crime, Politics and


Violence in Post-Earthquake Haiti, 2010, http://www.usip.
org/sites/default/files/PB%2058%20-%20Crime%20
Politics%20and%20Violence%20in%20PostEarthquake%20Haiti.pdf

6.

Ibid.

7.

Ibid.

8.

Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters,


International Disaster Database, 2015, accessed 1 April
2016, http://www.emdat.be/

9.

Ibid.

5. Ibid.

8. Reuters, Russias Putin Order Cuts to Interior Ministry


Payroll As Economy Struggles, 13 July 2015, accessed 156
May 2016, http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/
russias-putin-order-cuts-to-interior-ministry-payroll-aseconomy-struggles/525531.html
9. Note this data differs very slightly to SIPRI military
expenditure trend data due to slightly different GDP data.
Also note SIPRI and IEP measurement years differ by one
year.
10. Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, SIPRI
Fact Sheet Trends In World Military Expenditure, 2014 and
2015, accessed 02 May 2016, http://books.sipri.org/files/FS/
SIPRIFS1604.pdf
11. Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development,
Central Government Expenditure, accessed 30 April 2016,
https://data.oecd.org/gga/central-government-spending.
htm and International Monetary Fund, Government
Expenditure data, accessed on 30 April 2016, http://data.
imf.org/?sk=5804C5E1-0502-4672-BDCD-671BCDC565A9
12. US military related expenditure includes $848 billion PPP
spent on Veterans Affairs, maintenance of the nuclear
arsenal and interest payments on military-related debt.
13. Londoo, J. L., and Guerrero, R., Violencia en Amrica
Latina: epidemiologa y costos. Asalto al desarrollo.
Violencia en Amrica Latina,2000: 11-57.

10. The log of number of people affected provides a better


distribution to visualise.
11. Results filtered for natural disasters that affect greater
than 100 people to disregard smaller events.
12. EMDAT reports property damage in US dollars in the year
of the event. All amounts have been converted to 2005
USD.

GLOBAL PEACE INDEX 2016 | Appendices

113

13. Nzapayeke, A, New CAR PM says ending atrocities is


priority, 2014, accessed 12 May 2016, http://www.aljazeera.
com/news/africa/2014/01/new-car-pm-says-endingatrocities-priority-2014126124325498176.html
14. Spencer, R, Isil carried out massacres and mass sexual
enslavement of Yazidis, UN confirms, 2014, accessed 12
May 2016, http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/
islamic-state/11160906/Isil-carried-out-massacres-andmass-sexual-enslavement-of-Yazidis-UN-confirms.html

Section 5
Sustainable Development Goal 16
1.

2.

114

United Nations, 2015, The Millennium Development Goals


Report 2015, accessed 1 April 2016, http://www.un.org/
millenniumgoals/2015_MDG_Report/pdf/MDG%202015%20
rev%20(July%201).pdf
Institute for Economics and Peace, 2015, Peace and
Corruption, accessed 1 April 2016, http://
economicsandpeace.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/
Peace-and-Corruption.pdf

3.

Karen Yourish, K.K. Rebecca Lai & Derek Watkins, 14


September 2015, Death in Syria, New York Times, accessed
1 April 2016, http://www.nytimes.com/
interactive/2015/09/14/world/middleeast/syria-war-deaths.
html

4.

United Nations Security Council, 17 August 2015, Alarmed


by Continuing Syria Crisis, Security Council Affirms Its
Support for Special Envoys Approach in Moving Political
Solution Forward, accessed 1 April 2016, http://www.
un.org/press/en/2015/sc12008.doc.htm

5.

Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, 16 June 2015, Syrian


Civil War Death Toll Climbs Over 320,000 Casualties;
Observatory Group Slams International Communitys
Silence as Encouraging Bloodshed, accessed 1 April 2016,
http://www.syriahr.com/en/2015/06/16/syrian-civil-wardeath-toll-climbs-over-320000-casualties-observatorygroup-slams-international-communitys-silence-asencouraging-bloodshed/

6.

Department of State, July 2015, Trafficking In Persons


Report, accessed 1 April 2016, http://www.state.gov/
documents/organization/245365.pdf

7.

Arms Trade Treaty, 2014, ATT Baseline Assessment Project,


accessed 1 April 2016, http://www.armstrade.info/about-us/

8.

Institute for Economics and Peace, 2015, Peace and


Corruption, accessed 1 April 2016, http://
economicsandpeace.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/
Peace-and-Corruption.pdf

9.

Amartya Sen, 1999, Development as Freedom, Oxford


University Press

10. Economist Intelligence Unit, 2015, Democracy Index 2015,


accessed 1 April 2016, http://www.eiu.com/public/
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11. International Trade Union Confederation, 2015, ITUC Global
Rights Index 2015, accessed 1 April 2016, http://www.
ituc-csi.org/ituc-global-rights-index-2015
12. United Nations, 2011, UN Rule of Law Indicators, accessed 1
April 2016, http://www.un.org/en/events/
peacekeepersday/2011/publications/un_rule_of_law_
indicators.pdf

Appendix A
GPI Methodology
1.

J. E. Foster , M. McGillivray and S. Seth, 2012, Rank


Robustness of Composite Indices: Dominance and
Ambiguity, http://www.ophi.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/
ophi-wp-26b.pdf

2.

Ibid.

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